The Book
of
American
Negro
Poetry
Chosen and Edited
With an Essay on
The Negro's Creative
Genius By
JAMES WELDON
JOHNSON
Very few people know how much good poetry, not only in
dialect but also in straight English, the Negro race has con-
tributed to American Literature. This book is the first to give
an idea of the Negro poets of America from Paul Laurence
Dunbar to the writers of to-day. Mr. Johnson is himself a
poet of distinction, and his introductory essay is both sugges-
tive and stimulating.
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The Book of
American Negro Poetry
CHOSEN AND EDITED
WITH AN E55AY ON THE
NLGRO'5 CREATIVE GENIUS
BY
JAML5 WLLDON J0HN50N
Author of " Fifty Years and Other Poems"
NEW YORK
HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY, INC.
PRINTED IN THE U. 8. A. BY
THE QUINN a BODEN COMPANY
RAHWAY. N. J.
CONTENTS
PAGE
Preface .: . < . vii
Paul Laurence Dunbar
A Negro Love Song ..... . ,- . 3
Little Brown Baby . 5
Ships That Pass in the Night 7
Lover's Lane 8
The Debt 10
The Haunted Oak 11
When de Co'n Pone's Hot 14
A Death Song 16
James Edwin Campbell
Negro Serenade .17
De Cunjah Man 18
Uncle Eph's Banjo Song 20
or Doc' Hyar 21
When or Sis' Judy Pray 23
Compensation 25
James D. Corrothers
At the Closed Gate of Justice 27
Paul Laurence Dunbar 28
The Negro Singer 29
The Road to the Bow 30
In the Matter of Two Men 32
An Indignation Dinner 34
Dream and the Song 36
Daniel Webster Davis
"Weh Down Souf 39
Hog Meat 41
William H. A. Moore
Dusk Song 43
It Was Not Fate 46
W. E. BURGHARDT Du BOIS
A Litany of Atlanta 49
iii
iv Contents
George Marion McClellan page
Dogwood Blossoms . . . , . . . . 55
A Butterfly in Church ........ 56
The Hills of Sewanee ........ 57
The Feet of Judas ........ 58
William Stanley Braithwaite
Sandy Star and Willie Gee . . . . . . 59
I. Sculptured Worship
II. Laughing It Out
III. The Exit
IV. The Way
V. Onus Proband!
Del Cascar . . • 63
Turn Me to My Yellow Leaves 64
Ironic: LL.D 65
Scintilla 66
Sic Vita 67
Rhapsody 68
George Reginald Margetson
Stanzas from The Fledgling Bard and the Poetry So-
ciety 69
James Weldon Johnson
O Black and Unknown Bards 73
Sence You Went Away 75
The Creation 76
The White Witch 80
Mother Night 83
O Southland 84
Brothers 85
Fifty Years 89
John Wesley Hollow ay
Miss Melerlee 93
Calling the Doctor 94
The Corn Song 96
Black Mammies 98
Leslie Pinckney Hill
Tuskegee loi
Christmas at Melrose 102
Summer Magic 104
The Teacher 105
Edward Smyth Jones
A Song of Thanks 107
Contents v
Ray G. Dandridge page
Time to Die 109
'Ittle Touzle Head no
Zalka Peetruza ii3
Sprin' Fevah 113
De Drum Majah 114
Fenton Johnson
Children of the Sun 117
The New Day 119
Tired 121
The Banjo Player 122
The Scarlet Woman 123
R. Nathaniel Dett
The Rubinstein Staccato Etude 125
Georgia Douglas Johnson
The Heart of a Woman 127
Youth 128
Lost Illusions 129
I Want to Die While You Love Me . . . .130
Welt 131
My Little Dreams 132
Claude McKay
The Lynching , 133
If We Must Die 1^4
To the White Fiends 135
The Harlem Dancer 136
Harlem Shadows •• . . 137
After the Winter 138
Spring in New Hampshire 139
The Tired Worker 140
The Barrier 141
To O. E. A 142
Flame-Heart 143
Two-an'-Six 145
Joseph S. Cotter, Jr.
A Prayer 151
And What Shall You Say? 152
Is It Because I Am Black? 153
The Band of Gideon 154
Rain Music 156
Supplication 157
RoscoE C. Jamison
The Negro Soldiers 159
vi Contents
Jessie Fauset page
La Vie C'est la Vie i6i
Christmas Eve in France 162
Dead Fires 164.
Oriflamme 165
Oblivion 166
Anne Spencer
Before the Feast of Shushan 167
At the Carnival 169
The Wife-Woman 171
Translation 173
Dunbar 174
Alex Rogers
Why Adam Sinned ...... . . 175
The Rain Song 177
Waverley Turner Carmichael
Keep Me, Jesus, Keep Me 181
Winter Is Coming x82
Alice Dunbar-Nelson
Sonnet 183
Charles Bertram Johnson
A Little Cabin 185
Negro Poets 187
Otto Leland Bohanan
The Dawn's Awake! 189
The Washer-Woman 190
Theodore Henry Shackelford
The Big Bell in Zion 191
LuciAN B. Watkins
Star of Ethiopia 193
Two Points of View 194
To Our Friends 195
Benjamin Brawley
My Hero 197
Chaucer 199
Joshua Henry Jones, Jr.
To a Skull 20X
Preface
There is, perhaps, a better excuse for giving an Anthol-
ogy of American Negro Poetry to the public than can be
offered for many of the anthologies that have recently
been issued. The public, generally speaking, does not
know that there are American Negro poets — to supply
this lack of information is, alone, a work worthy of some-
body's effort.
Moreover, the matter of Negro poets and the produc-
tion of literature by the colored people in this country
involves more than supplying information that is lacking.
It is a matter which has a direct bearing on the most
vital of American problems.
A people may become great through many means, but
there is only one measure by which its greatness is recog-
nized and acknowledged. The final measure of the great-
ness of all peoples is the amount and standard of the
literature and art they have produced. The world does
not know that a people is great until that people pro-
duces great literature and art. No people that has pro-
duced great literature and art has ever been looked upon
by the world as distinctly inferior.
The status of the Negro in the United States is more
a question of national mental attitude toward the race
than of actual conditions. And nothing will do more
to change that mental attitude and raise his status than
a demonstration of intellectual parity by the Negro
through the production of literature and art.
viii Preface
Is there likelihood that the American Negro will be
able to do this? There is, for the good reason that he
possesses the Innate powers. He has the emotional en-
dowment, the originality and artistic conception, and,
what is more important, the power of creating that which
has universal appeal and influence.
I make here what may appear to be a more startling
statement by saying that the Negro has already proved
the possession of these powers by being the creator of the
only things artistic that have yet sprung from American
soil and been universally acknowledged as distinctive
American products.
These creations by the American Negro may be
summed up under four heads. The first two are the
Uncle Remus stories, which were collected by Joel Chand-
ler Harris, and the "spirituals" or slave songs, to which
the Fisk Jubilee Singers made the public and the musi-
cians of both the United States and Europe listen. The
Uncle Remus stories constitute the greatest body of folk-
lore that America has produced, and the "spirituals" the
greatest body of folk-song. I shall speak of the "spir-
ituals" later because they are more than folk-songs, for in
them the Negro sounded the depths, if he did not scale
the heights, of music.
The other two creations are the Cakewalk and ragtime.
We do not need to go very far back to remember when
cakewalking was the rage in the United States, Europe
and South America. Society in this country and royalty
abroad spent time in practicing the intricate steps. Paris
pronounced it the "poetry of motion." The popularity of
the Cakewalk passed away but its influence remained.
Preface ix
The influence can be seen to-day on any American stage
where there is dancing.
The influence which the Negro has exercised on the
art of dancing in this country has been almost absolute.
For generations the *'buck and wing" and the "stop-time"
dances, which are strictly Negro, have been familiar to
American theatre audiences. A few years ago the public
discovered the "turkey trot," the "eagle rock," "ballin' the
jack," and several other varieties that started the modern
dance craze. These dances were quickly followed by the
"tango," a dance originated by the Negroes of Cuba and
later transplanted to South America. (This fact is
attested by no less authority than Vincente Blasco Ibanez
in his "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.") Half the
floor space in the country was then turned over to dancing,
and highly paid exponents sprang up everywhere. The
most noted, Mr. Vernon Castle, and, by the way, an
Englishman, never danced except to the music of a colored
band, and he never failed to state to his audiences that
most of his dances had long been done by "your colored
people," as he put it.
Any one who witnesses a musical production in which
there is dancing cannot fail to notice the Negro stamp on
all the movements; a stamp which even the great vogue
of Russian dances that swept the country about the time
of the popular dance craze could not afFect. That pecu-
liar swaying of the shoulders which you see done every-
where by the blond girls of the chorus is nothing more
than a movement from the Negro dance referred to above,
the "eagle rock." Occasionally the movement takes on
a suggestion of the, now outlawed, "shimmy."
X Preface
As for Ragtime, I go straight to the statement that
it is the one artistic production by which America is
known the world over. It has been all-conquering.
Everywhere it is hailed as "American music."
For a dozen years or so there has been a steady tend-
ency to divorce Ragtime from the Negro; in fact, to
take from him the credit of having originated it. Prob-
ably the younger people of the present generation do
not know that Ragtime is of Negro origin. The change
wrought in Ragtime and the way in which it is accepted
by the country have been brought about chiefly through
the change which has gradually been made in the words
and stories accompanying the music. Once the text of
all Ragtime songs was written in Negro dialect, and was
about Negroes in the cabin or in the cotton field or on
the levee or at a jubilee or on Sixth Avenue or at a ball,
and about their love affairs. To-day, only a small pro-
portion of Ragtime songs relate at all to the Negro. The
truth is. Ragtime is now national rather than racial. But
that does not abolish in any way the claim of the Ameri-
can Negro as its originator.
Ragtime music was originated by colored piano players
in the questionable resorts of St. Louis, Memphis, and
other Mississippi River towns. These men did not know
any more about the theory of music than they did about
the theory of the universe. They were guided by their
natural musical instinct and talent, but above all by the
Negro's extraordinary sense of rhythm. Any one who is
familiar with Ragtime may note that its chief charm is
not in melody, but in rhythms. These players often
Preface xi
improvised crude and, at times, vulgar words to fit the
music. This was the beginning of the Ragtime song.
Ragtime music got its first popular hearing at Chicago
during the world's fair in that city. From Chicago it
made its way to New York, and then started on its uni-
versal triumph.
The earliest Ragtime songs, like Topsy, "jes* grew."
Some of these earliest songs were taken down by white
men, the words slightly altered or changed, and published
under the names of the arrangers. They sprang into im-
mediate popularity and earned small fortunes. The first
to become widely known was "The Bully," a levee song
which had been long used by roustabouts along the Mis-
sissippi. It was introduced in New York by Miss May
Irwin, and gained instant popularity. Another one of
these "jes* grew" songs was one which for a while dis-
puted for place with Yankee Doodle; perhaps, disputes
it even to-day. That song was "A Hot Time in the Old
Town To-night"; introduced and made popular by the
colored regimental bands during the Spanish-American
War.
Later there came along a number of colored men who
were able to transcribe the old songs and write original
ones. I was, about that time, writing words to music
for the music show stage in New York. I was collabo-
rating with my brother, J. Rosamond Johnson, and the
late Bob Cole. I remember that we appropriated about
the last one of the old "jes' grew" songs. It was a song
which had been sung for years all through the South.
The words were unprintable, but the tune was irresistible,
and belonged to nobody. We took it, re-wrote the verses,
Xll
Preface
telling an entirely different story from the original, left
the chorus as it was, and published the song, at first under
the name of *'Will Handy." It became very popular with
college boys, especially at football games, and perhaps
still is. The song was, "Oh, Didn't He Ramble!"
In the beginning, and for quite a while, almost all of
the Ragtime songs that were deliberately composed were
the work of colored writers. Now, the colored composers,
even in this particular field, are greatly outnumbered by
the white.
The reader might be curious to know if the "jes* grew"
songs have ceased to grow. No, they have not; they are
growing all the time. The country has lately been flooded
with several varieties of "The Blues." These "Blues,"
too, had their origin In Memphis, and the towns along
the Mississippi. They are a sort of lament of a lover
who is feeling "blue" over the loss of his sweetheart. The
"Blues" of Memphis have been adulterated so much on
Broadway that they have lost their pristine hue. But
whenever you hear a piece of music which has a strain
like this in it:
you will know you are listening to something which be-
longed originally to Beale Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee.
Preface xiii
The original "Memphis Blues," so far as it can be cred-
ited to a composer, must be credited to Mr. W. C. Handy,
a colored musician of Memphis.
As illustrations of the genuine Ragtime song in the
making, I quote the words of two that were popular with
the Southern colored soldiers in France. Here is the
first:
"Mah mammy's lyin' in her grave,
Mah daddy done run away,
Mah sister's married a gamblin' man,
An' I've done gone astray.
Yes, I've done gone astray, po' boy.
An' I've done gone astray,
Mah sister's married a gamblin' man.
An' I've done gone astray, po' boy."
These lines are crude, but they contain something of
real poetry, of that elusive thing which nobody can define
and that you can only tell that it is there when you feel
it. You cannot read these lines without becoming reflec-
tive and feeling sorry for "Po* Boy."
Now, take in this word picture of utter dejection :
"I'm jes* as misabul as I can be,
I'm unhappy even if I am free,
I'm feelin' down, I'm feelin' blue;
I wander 'round, don't know what to do.
I'm go'n lay mah haid on de railroad line.
Let de B. & O. come and pacify mah min'."
These lines are, no doubt, one of the many versions
of the famous "Blues." They are also crude, but they
go straight to the mark. The last two lines move with
the swiftness of all great tragedy.
XIV Treface
In spite of the bans which musicians and music teachers
have placed on it, the people still demand and enjoy
Ragtime. In fact, there is not a corner of the civilized
world in which it is not known and liked. And this
proves its originality, for if it were an imitation, the
people of Europe, at least, would not have found it a
novelty. And it is proof of a more important thing, it
is proof that Ragtime possesses the vital spark, the power
to appeal universally, without which any artistic produc-
tion, no matter how approved its form may be, is dead.
Of course, there are those who will deny that Ragtime
is an artistic production. American musicians, especially,
instead of investigating Ragtime, dismiss it with a con-
temptuous word. But this has been the course of scholas-
ticism in every branch of art. Whatever new thing the
people like is pooh-poohed; whatever is popular is re-
garded as not worth while. The fact is, nothing great
or enduring in music has ever sprung full-fledged from
the brain of any master; the best he gives the world he
gathers from the hearts of the people, and runs it through
the alembic of his genius.
Ragtime deserves serious attention. There is a lot of
colorless and vicious imitation, but there is enough that
is genuine. In one composition alone, "The Memphis
Blues," the musician will find not only great melodic
beauty, but a polyphonic structure that is amazing.
It is obvious that Ragtime has influenced, and in a
large measure, become our popular music; but not many
would know that it has influenced even our religious
music. Those who are familiar with gospel hymns can
at once see this influence if they will compare the songs
Preface xv
of thirty years ago, such as "In the Sweet Bye and Bye,"
"The Ninety and Nine," etc., with the up-to-date, synco-
pated tunes that are sung in Sunday Schools, Christian
Endeavor Societies, Y.M.C.A.'s and like gatherings
to-day.
Ragtime has not only influenced American music, it
has influenced American life; indeed, it has saturated
American life. It has become the popular medium for
our national expression musically. And who can say that
it does not express the blare and jangle and the surge, too,
of our national spirit?
Any one who doubts that there is a peculiar heel-
tickling, smile-provoking, joy-awakening, response-com-
pelling charm in Ragtime needs only to hear a skillful
performer play the genuine article, needs only to listen
to its bizarre harmonies, its audacious resolutions often
consisting of an abrupt jump from one key to another,
its intricate rhythms in which the accents fall in the
most unexpected places but in which the fundamental
beat is never lost in order to be convinced. I believe
it has its place as well as the music which draws from
us sighs and tears.
Now, these dances which I have referred to and Rag-
time music may be lower forms of art, but they are evi-
dence of a power that will some day be applied to the
higher forms. And even now we need not stop at the
Negro's accomplishment through these lower forms. In
the "spirituals," or slave songs, the Negro has given
America not only its only folksongs, but a mass of noble
music. I never think of this music but that I am struck
XVI
Preface
by the wonder, the miracle of its production. How did
the men who originated these songs manage to do it?
The sentiments are easily accounted for; they are, for the
most part, taken from the Bible. But the melodies, where
did they come from? Some of them so weirdly sweet,
and others so wonderfully strong. Take, for instance,
**Go Down, Moses"; I doubt that there is a stronger
theme in the whole musical literature of the world.
^¥^q^r^^^^^
I
Oppressed so hard theycoald not stand.Let my people go. Go down, Mo-ses,
way down in E-gypt land, Tell ole Pha-raoh, Let my people go.
It is to be noted that whereas the chief characteristic
of Ragtime is rhythm, the chief characteristic of the
"spirituals" is melody. The melodies of "Steal Away to
Jesus,** "Swing Low Sweet Chariot," "Nobody Knows
de Trouble I See," "I Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray,"
^'Deep River," "O, Freedom Over Me," and many others
of these songs possess a beauty that is — what shall I say?
poignant. In the riotous rhythms of Ragtime the
Preface xvli
Negro expressed his irrepressible buoyancy, his keen
response to the sheer joy of living; in the "spirituals" he
voiced his sense of beauty and his deep religious feeling.
Naturally, not as much can be said for the words of
these songs as for the music. Most of the songs are reli-
gious. Some of them are songs expressing faith and en-
durance and a longing for freedom. In the religious
songs, the sentiments and often the entire lines are taken
bodily from the Bible. However, there is no doubt that
some of these religious songs have a meaning apart from
the Biblical text. It is evident that the opening lines of
"Go Down, Moses,"
"Go down, Moses,
'Way down in Egypt land;
Tell old Pharoah,
Let ray people go."
have a significance beyond the bondage of Israel in Egypt.
The bulk of the lines to these songs, as is the case in
all communal music, is made up of choral iteration and
incremental repetition of the leader's lines. If the words
are read, this constant iteration and repetition are found
to be tiresome; and it must be admitted that the lines
themselves are often very trite. And, yet, there is fre-
quently revealed a flash of real, primitive poetry. I give
the following examples:
"Sometimes I feel like an eagle in de air."
"You may bury me in de East,
You may bury me in de West,
But I'll hear de trumpet sound
In-a dat mornin'."
xviii Preface
"I know de moonlight, I know de starlight;
I lay dis body down.
I walic in de moonlight, I walk in de starlight;
I lay dis body down.
I know de graveyard, I know de graveyard,
When I lay dis body down.
I walk in de graveyard, I walk troo de graveyard
To lay dis body down.
"I lay in de grave an* stretch out my arms;
I lay dis body down.
I go to de judgment in de evenin' of de day
When I lay dis body down.
An' my soul an' yo' soul will meet in de day
When I lay dis body down."
Regarding the line, *'I lay in de grave an* stretch out
my arms," Col. Thomas Wentworth Higginson of Bos-
ton, one of the first to give these slave songs serious study,
said: "Never it seems to me, since man first lived and
suffered, w^as his infinite longing for peace uttered more
plaintively than in that line."
These Negro folksongs constitute a vast mine of mate-
rial that has been neglected almost absolutely. The only
white v^riters who have in recent years given adequate
attention and study to this music, that I know of, are
Mr. H. E. Krehbiel and Mrs. Natalie Curtis Burlin.
We have our native composers denying the worth and im-
portance of this music, and trying to manufacture grand
opera out of so-called Indian themes.
But there is a great hope for the development of this
music, and that hope is the Negro himself. A worthy
beginning has already been made by Burleigh, Cook, John-
son, and Dett. And there will yet come great Negro
Preface xix
composers who will take this music and voice through
it not only the soul of their race, but the soul of America.
And does it not seem odd that this greatest gift of
the Negro has been the most neglected of all he pos-
sesses? Money and effort have been expended upon his
development in every direction except this. This gift has
been regarded as a kind of side show, something for
occasional exhibition; wherein it is the touchstone, it is
the magic thing, it is that by which the Negro can bridge
all chasms. ,No persons, however hostile, can listen to
Negroes singing this wonderful music without having
their hostility melted down.
This power of the Negro to suck up the national spirit
from the soil and create something artistic and original,
which, at the same time, possesses the note of universal
appeal, is due to a remarkable racial gift of adaptability;
it is more than adaptability, it is a transfusive quality.
And the Negro has exercised this transfusive quality not
only here in America, where the race lives in large num-
bers, but in European countries, where the number has
been almost infinitesimal.
Is it not curious to know that the greatest poet of
Russia is Alexander Pushkin, a man of African descent;
that the greatest romancer of France is Alexander Dumas,
a man of African descent; and that one of the greatest
musicians of England is Coleridge-Taylor, a man of
African descent?
The fact is fairly well known that the father of
Dumas was a Negro of the French West Indies, and that
the father of Coleridge-Taylor was a native-born African ;
XX Preface
but the facts concerning Pushkin's African ancestry are
not so familiar.
When Peter the Great was Czar of Russia, some po-
tentate presented him with a full-blooded Negro of gigan-
tic size. Peter, the most eccentric ruler of modern times,
dressed this Negro up in soldier clothes, christened him
Hannibal, and made him a special body-guard.
But Hannibal had more than size, he had brain and
ability. He not only looked picturesque and imposing in
soldier clothes, he showed that he had in him the making
of a real soldier. Peter recognized this, and eventually
made him a general. He afterwards ennobled him, and
Hannibal, later, married one of the ladies of the Russian
court. This same Hannibal was great-grandfather of
Pushkin, the national poet of Russia, the man who bears
the same relation to Russian literature that Shakespeare
bears to English literature.
I know the question naturally arises: If out of the few
Negroes who have lived in France there came a Dumas;
and out of the few Negroes who have lived in England
there came a Coleridge-Taylor ; and if from the man who
was at the time, probably, the only Negro in Russia there
sprang that country's national poet, why have not the mil-
lions of Negroes in the United States with all the emo-
tional and artistic endowment claimed for them produced
a Dumas, or a Coleridge-Taylor, or a Pushkin ?
The question seems difficult, but there is an answer.
The Negro in the United States is consuming all of his
intellectual energy in this gruelling race-struggle. And
the same statement may be made in a general way about
the white South. Why does not the white South produce
Preface xxi
literature and art? The white South, too, is consuming
all of its intellectual energy in this lamentable conflict.
Nearly all of the mental efforts of the white South run
through one narrow channel. The life of every Southern
white man and all of his activities are impassably limited
by the ever present Negro problem. And that is why, as
Mr. H. L. Mencken puts it, in all that vast region, with
its thirty or forty million people and its territory as
large as a half a dozen Frances or Germanys, there is not
a single poet, not a serious historian, not a creditable com-
poser, not a critic good or bad, not a dramatist dead or
alive.
But, even so, the American Negro has accomplished
something In pure literature. The list of those who have
done so would be surprising both by its length and the
excellence of the achievements. One of the great books
written in this country since the Civil War is the work
of a colored man, "The Souls of Black Folk," by W. E. B.
Du Bois.
Such a list begins with Phlllis Wheatley. In 1761
a slave ship landed a cargo of slaves in Boston. Among
them was a little girl seven or eight years of age. She
attracted the attention of John Wheatley, a wealthy gen-
tleman of Boston, who purchased her as a servant for his
wife. Mrs. Wheatley was a benevolent woman. She
noticed the girl's quick mind and determined to give her
opportunity for its development. Twelve years later
Phillis published a volume of poems. The book v/as
brought out in London, where Phillis was for several
months an object of great curiosity and attention.
xxii Preface
Phlllis Wheatley has never been given her rightful
place in American literature. By some sort of con-
spiracy she is kept out of most of the books, especially
the text-books on literature used in the schools. Of
course, she is not a great American poet — and in her day
there were no great American poets — 'but she is an
important American poet. Her importance, if for no
other reason, rests on the fact that, save one, she is the
first in order of time of all the women poets of America.
And she is among the first of all American poets to issue
a volume.
It seems strange that the books generally give space
to a mention of Urian Oakes, President of Harvard
College, and to quotations from the crude and lengthy
elegy which he published in 1667; and print examples
from the execrable versified version of the Psalms made
by the New England divines, and yet deny a place to
Phillis Wheatley.
Here are the opening lines from the elegy by Oakes,
which is quoted from in most of the books on American
literature :
"Reader, I am no poet, but I grieve.
Behold here what that passion can do,
That forced a verse without Apollo's leave,
And whether the learned sisters would or no."
There was no need for Urian to admit what his handi-
work declared. But this from the versified Psalms is
still worse, yet it is found in the books:
"The Lord's song sing can we? being
in stranger's land, then let
lose her skill my right hand if I
Jerusalem forget."
Preface xxiii
Anne Bradstreet preceded Phillis Wheatley by a little
over twenty years. She published her volume of poems,
"The Tenth Muse," in 1750. Let us strike a com-
parison between the two. Anne Bradstreet was a wealthy,
cultivated Puritan girl, the daughter of Thomas Dudley,
Governor of Bay Colony. Phillis, as we know, was a
Negro slave girl born in Africa. Let us take them both
at their best and in the same vein. The following stanza
is from Anne's poem entitled "Contemplation":
"While musing thus with contemplation fed,
And thousand fancies buzzing in my brain,
The sweet tongued Philomel percht o'er my head,
And chanted forth a most melodious strain,
Which rapt me so with wonder and delight,
I judged my hearing better than my sight,
And wisht me wings with her awhile to take ray flight."
And the following is from Phillis' poem entitled
^'Imagination" :
"Imagination! who can sing thy force?
Or who describe the swiftness of thy course?
Soaring through air to find the bright abode,
The empyreal palace of the thundering God,
We on thy pinions can surpass the wind,
And leave the rolling universe behind,
From star to star the mental optics rove,
Measure the skies, and range the realms above.
There in one view we grasp the mighty whole,
Or with new worlds amaze the unbounded soul."
We do not think the black woman suffers much by com-
parison with the white. Thomas Jefferson said of Phillis :
"Religion has produced a Phillis Wheatley, but it could
not produce a poet; her poems are beneath contempt."
It is quite likely that Jefferson's criticism was directed
more against religion than against Phillis' poetry. On
xxiv Preface
the other hand, General George Washington wrote her
with his own hand a letter in which he thanked her
for a poem which she had dedicated to him. He, later,
received her with marked courtesy at his camp at Cam-
bridge.
It appears certain that Phillis was the first person to
apply to George Washington the phrase, ''First in peace."
The phrase occurs in her poem addressed to "His Excel-
lency, General George Washington," written in 1775.
The encomium, "First in war, first in peace, first in the
hearts of his countrymen" was originally used in the reso-
lutions presented to Congress on the death of Washing-
ton, December, 1799.
Phillis Wheatley's poetry is the poetry of the Eight-
eenth Century. She wrote when Pope and Gray were
supreme; it is easy to see that Pope was her model. Had
she come under the influence of Wordsworth, Byron or
Keats or Shelley, she would have done greater work. As
it is, her work must not be judged by the work and stand-
ards of a later day, but by the work and standards of
her own day and her own contemporaries. By this method
of criticism she stands out as one of the important char-
acters in the making of American literature, without any
allowances for her sex or her antecedents.
According to "A Bibliographical Checklist of Ameri-
can Negro Poetry," compiled by Mr. Arthur A. Schom-
burg, more than one hundred Negroes in the United
States have published volumes of poetry ranging in size
from pamphlets to books of from one hundred to three
hundred pages. About thirty of these writers fill in the
Preface xxv
gap between Phillis Wheatley and Paul Laurence Dun-
bar. Just here it is of interest to note that a Negro wrote
and published a poem before Phillis Wheatley arrived in
this country from Africa. He was Jupiter Hammon, a
slave belonging to a Mr. Lloyd of Queens- Village, Long
Island. In 1760 Hammon published a poem, eighty-eight
lines in length, entitled "An Evening Thought, Salva-
tion by Christ, with Penettential Cries." In 1788 he
published "An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatley, Ethio-
pian Poetess in Boston, who came from Africa at eight
years of age, and soon became acquainted with the Gospel
of Jesus Christ." These two poems do not include all
that Hammon wrote.
The poets between Phillis Wheatley and Dunbar must
be considered more in the light of what they attempted
than of what they accomplished. Many of them showed
marked talent, but barely a half dozen of them demon-
strated even mediocre mastery of technique in the use
of poetic material and forms. And yet there are several
names that deserve mention. George M. Horton, Frances
E. Harper, James M. Bell and Alberry A. Whitman, all
merit consideration when due allowances are made for
their limitations in education, training and general cul-
ture. The limitations of Horton were greater than those
of either of the others; he was born a slave in North
Carolina in 1797, and as a young man began to compose
poetry without being able to write it down. Later he
received some instruction from professors of the Uni-
versity of North Carolina, at which institution he was
employed as a janitor. He published a volume of poems,
"The Hope of Liberty," in 1829.
xxvi Preface
Mrs. Harper, Bell and Whitman would stand out if
only for the reason that each of them attempted sustained
work. Mrs. Harper published her first volume of poems
in 1854, but later she published "Moses, a Story of the
Nile," a poem which ran to 52 closely printed pages.
Bell in 1864 published a poem of 28 pages in celebration
of President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. In
1870 he published a poem of 32 pages in celebration of
the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Con-
stitution. Whitman published his first volume of poems,
a book of 253 pages, in 1877; but in 1884 he published
"The Rape of Florida," an epic poem written in four
cantos and done in the Spenserian stanza, and which ran
to 97 closely printed pages. The poetry of both Mrs.
Harper and of Whitman had a large degree of popularity;
one of Mrs. Harper's books went through more than
twenty editions.
Of these four poets, it is Whitman who reveals not
only the greatest imagination but also the more skillful
workmanship. His lyric power at its best may be judged
from the following stanza from the "Rape of Florida":
" 'Come now, my love, the moon is on the lake ;
Upon the waters is my light canoe;
Come with me, love, and gladsome oars shall make
A music on the parting wave for you.
Come o'er the waters deep and dark and blue;
Come where the lilies in the marge have sprung,
Come with me, love, for Oh, my love is true!'
This is the song that on the lake was sung,
The boatman sang it when his heart was young."
Some idea of Whitman's capacity for dramatic nar-
ration may be gained from the following lines taken from
Preface xxvii
"Not a Man, and Yet a Man," a poem of even greater
length than "The Rape of Florida" :
"A flash of steely lightning from his hand,
Strikes down the groaning leader of the band;
Divides his startled comrades, and again
Descending, leaves fair Dora's captors slain.
Her, seizing then within a strong embrace,
Out in the dark he wheels his flying pace;
He speaks not, but with stalwart tenderness
Her swelling bosom firm to his doth press;
Springs like a stag that flees the eager hound,
And like a whirlwind rustles o'er the ground.
Her locks swim in dishevelled wildness o'er
His shoulders, streaming to his waist and more;
While on and on, strong as a rolling flood.
His sweeping footsteps part the silent wood."
It Is curious and Interesting to trace the growth of
Individuality and race consciousness In this group of poets.
Jupiter Hammon's verses were almost entirely religious
exhortations. Only very seldom does Phlllis Wheatley
sound a native note. Four times In single lines she refers
to herself as "Afrlc's muse." In a poem of admonition
addressed to the students at the "University of Cambridge
in New England" she refers to herself as follows:
"Ye blooming plants of human race divine,
An Ethiop tells you 'tis your greatest foe."
But one looks in vain for some outburst or even complaint
against the bondage of her people, for some agonizing
cry about her native land. In two poems she refers
definitely to Africa as her home, but In each Instance
there seems to be under the sentiment of the lines a
feeling of almost smug contentment at her own escape
xxviii Preface
therefrom. In the poem, "On Being Brought from Africa
to America," she says:
" 'Twas mercy brought me from my pagan land,
Taught my benighted soul to understand
That there's a God and there's a Saviour too;
Once I redemption neither sought or knew.
Some view our sable race with scornful eye,
'Their color is a diabolic dye.*
Remember, Christians, Negroes black as Cain,
May be refined, and join th' angelic train."
In the poem addressed to the Earl of Dartmouth, she
speaks of freedom and makes a reference to the parents
from whom she was taken as a child, a reference which
cannot but strike the reader as rather unimpassioned :
"Should you, my lord, while you peruse my song.
Wonder from whence ray love of Freedom sprung,
Whence flow these wishes for the common good.
By feeling hearts alone best understood ;
I, young in life, by seeming cruel fate
Was snatch'd from Afric's fancy'd happy seat;
What pangs excruciating must molest,
What sorrows labor in my parents' breast?
Steel'd was that soul and by no misery mov'd
That from a father seiz'd his babe belov'd ;
Such, such my case. And can I then but pray
Others may never feel tyrannic sway?"
The bulk of Phillis Wheatley's work consists of poems
addressed to people of prominence. Her book was dedi-
cated to the Countess of Huntington, at whose house
she spent the greater part of her time while in England.
On his repeal of the Stamp Act, she wrote a poem to
King George III, whom she saw later; another poem she
wrote to the Earl of Dartmouth, whom she knew. A
number of her verses were addressed to other persons of
Preface ' xxix
distinction. Indeed, it is apparent that Phillis was far
from being a democrat. She was far from being a demo-
crat not only in her social ideas but also in her political
ideas; unless a religious meaning is given to the closing
lines of her ode to General Washington, she was a decided
royalist :
"A crown, a mansion, and a throne that shine
With gold unfading, Washington! be thine."
Nevertheless, she was an ardent patriot. Her ode to Gen-
eral Washington (1775), her spirited poem, "On Major
General Lee" ( 1776) and her poem, "Liberty and Peace,"
written in celebration of the close of the war, reveal not
only strong patriotic feeling but an understanding of the
issues at stake. In her poem, "On Major General Lee,"
she makes her hero reply thus to the taunts of the British
commander into whose hands he has been delivered
through treachery:
"O arrogance of tongue!
And wild ambition, ever prone to wrong!
Believ'st thou, chief, that armies such as thine
Can stretch in dust that heaven-defended line? ■
In vain allies may swarm from distant lands,
And demons aid in formidable bands,
Great as thou art, thou shun'st the field of fame,
Disgrace to Britain and the British name!
When offer'd combat by the noble foe,
(Foe to misrule) why did the sword forego
The easy conquest of the rebel-land?
Perhaps too easy for thy martial hand.
What various causes to. the field Invite!
For plunder YOU, and we for freedom fight,
Her cause divine with generous ardor fires,
And every bosom glows as she inspires!
Already thousands of your troops have fled
To the drear mansions of the silent dead:
XXX Preface
Columbia, too, beholds with streaming eyes
Her heroes fall — 'tis freedom's sacrifice!
So wills the power who with convulsive storms
Shakes impious realms, and nature's face deforms;
Yet those brave troops, innum'rous as the sands,
One soul inspires, one General Chief commands;
Find in your train of boasted heroes, one
To match the praise of Godlike Washington.
Thrice happy Chief in whom the virtues join,
And heaven taught prudence speaks the man divine."
What Phillis Wheatley failed to achieve is due in no
small degree to her education and environment. Her
mind was steeped In the classics; her verses are filled
with classical and mythological allusions. She knew Ovid
thoroughly and was familiar with other Latin authors.
She must have known Alexander Pope by heart. And,
too, she was reared and sheltered In a wealthy and cul-
tured family, — a wealthy and cultured Boston family;
she never had the opportunity to learn life; she never
found out her own true relation to life and to her sur-
roundings. And It should not be forgotten that she was
only about thirty years old when she died. The impulsion
or the compulsion that might have driven her genius off
the worn paths, out on a journey of exploration, Phillis
Wheatley never received. But, whatever her limitations,
she merits more than America has accorded her.
Horton, who was bom three years after Phillis Wheat-
ley's death, expressed In all of his poetry strong complaint
at his condition of slavery and a deep longing for free-
dom. The following verses are typical of his style and his
ability :
"Alas! and am I born for this,
To wear this slavish chain?
Preface xxxi
Deprived of all created bliss,
Through hardship, toil, and pain?
Come, Liberty! thou cheerful sound,
Roll through my ravished ears;
Come, let my grief in joys be drowned,
And drive away my fears."
In Mrs. Harper we find something more than the
complaint and the longing of Horton. We find an expres-
sion of a sense of wrong and injustice. The following
stanzas are from a poem addressed to the white women
of America:
"You can sigh o'er the sad-eyed Armenian
Who weeps in her desolate home.
You can mourn o'er the exile of Russia
From kindred and friends doomed to roam.
But hark! from our Southland are floating
Sobs of anguish, murmurs of pain,
And women heart-stricken are weeping
O'er their tortured and slain.
Have ye not, oh, my favored sisters,
Just a plea, a prayer or a tear
For mothers who dwell 'neath the shadows '
Of agony, hatred and fear?
Weep not, oh my well sheltered sisters,
Weep not for the Negro alone.
But weep for your sons who must gather
The crops which their fathers have sown."
Whitman, In the midst of "The Rape of Florida," a
poem In which he related the taking of the State of Flor-
ida from the Semlnoles, stops and discusses the race ques-
tion. He discusses it In many other poems; and he dis-
cusses It from many different angles. In Whitman
we find not only an expression of a sense of wrong and
xxxii Preface
injustice, but we hear a note of faith and a note also
of defiance. For example, in the opening to Canto II of
"The Rape of Florida":
"Greatness by nature cannot be entailed;
It is an office ending with the man, —
Sage, hero, Saviour, tho' the Sire ht hailed.
The son may reach obscurity in the van:
Sublime achievements know no patent plan,
Man's immortality's a book with seals,
And none but God shall open — none else can —
But opened, it the mystery reveals, —
Manhood's conquest of man to heaven's respect appeals.
"Is manhood less because man's face is black?
Let thunders of the loosened seals reply!
Who shall the rider's restive steed turn back,
Or who withstand the arrows he lets fly
Between the mountains of eternity?
Genius ride forth ! Thou gift and torch of heav'n !
The mastery is kindled in thine eye;
To conquest ride ! thy bow of strength is giv'n —
The trampled hordes of caste before thee shall be driv'n!
*' 'Tis hard to judge if hatred of one's race,
By those who deem themselves superior-born,
Be worse than that quiescence in disgrace.
Which only merits — and should only — scorn.
Oh, let me see the Negro night and morn.
Pressing and fighting in, for place and power!
All earth is place — all time th' auspicious hour,
While heaven leans forth to look, oh, will he quail or cower?
"Ah! I abhor his protest and complaint!
His pious looks and patience I despise!
He can't evade the test, disguised as saint;
The manly voice of freedom bids him rise,
And shake himself before Philistine eyes!
And, like a lion roused, no sooner than
A foe dare come, play all his energies.
And court the fray with fury if he can;
For hell itself respects a fearless, manly man."
Preface xxxiii
It may be said that none of these poets strike a deep
native strain or sound a distinctively original note, either
in matter or form. That is true ; but the same thing may
be said of all the American poets down to the writers
of the present generation, with the exception of Poe and
Walt Whitman. The thing in which these black poets
are mostly excelled by their contemporaries is mere tech-
nique.
Paul Laurence Dunbar stands out as the first poet from
the Negro race in the United States to show a combined
mastery over poetic material and poetic technique, to
reveal innate literary distinction in what he wrote, and
to maintain a high level of performance. He was the
first to rise to a height from which he could take a per-
spective view of his own race. He was the first to see
objectively its humor, its superstitions, its shortcomings;
the first to feel sympathetically its heart-wounds, its
yearnings, its aspirations, and to voice them all in a purely
literary form.
Dunbar's fame rests chiefly on his poems in Negro
dialect. This appraisal of him is, no doubt, fair; for
in these dialect poems he not only carried his art to the
highest point of perfection, but he made a contribution
to American literature unlike what any one else had
made, a contribution which, perhaps, no one else could
have made. Of course, Negro dialect poetry was writ-
ten before Dunbar wrote, most of it by white writers ; but
the fact stands out that Dunbar was the first to use it
as a medium for the true interpretation of Negro char-
acter and psychology. And, yet, dialect poetry does not
xxxiv Preface
constitute the whole or even the bulk of Dunbar's work.
In addition to a large number of poems of a very high
order done in literary English, he was the author of
four novels and several volumes of short stories.
Indeed, Dunbar did not begin his career as a writer of
dialect. I may be pardoned for introducing here a bit
of reminiscence. My personal friendship with Paul Dun^
bar began before he had achieved recognition, and con-
tinued to be close until his death. When I first met him
he had published a thin volume, "Oak and Ivy," which
was being sold chiefly through his own efforts. "Oak
and Ivy" showed no distinctive Negro influence, but
rather the influence of James Whitcomb Riley. At this
time Paul and I were together every day for several
months. He talked to me a great deal about his hopes
and ambitions. In these talks he revealed that he had
reached a realization of the possibilities of poetry in the
dialect, together with a recognition of the fact that it
offered the surest way by which he could get a hearing.
Often he said to me: "I've got to write dialect poetry; it's
the only way I can get them to listen to me." I was with
Dunbar at the beginning of what proved to be his last
illness. He said to me then: "I have not grown. I am
writing the same things I wrote ten years ago, and am
writing them no better." His self-accusation was not
fully true; he had grown, and he had gained a surer
control of his art, but he had not accomplished the greater
things of which he was constantly dreaming; the public
had held him to the things for which It had accorded
him recognition. If Dunbar had lived he would have
achieved some of those dreams, but even while he talked
Preface xxxv
so dejectedly to me he seemed to feel that he was not to
live. He died when he was only thirty-three.
It has a bearing on this entire subject to note that
Dunbar was of unmixed Negro blood ; so, as the greatest
figure in literature which the colored race in the United
States has produced, he stands as an example at once
refuting and confounding those who wish to believe that
whatever extraordinary ability an Aframerican shows is
due to an admixture of white blood.
As a man, Dunbar was kind and tender. In conver-
sation he was brilliant and polished. His voice was his
chief charm, and was a great element in his success as
a reader of his own works. In his actions he was im-
pulsive as a child, sometimes even erratic; indeed, his inti-
mate friends almost looked upon him as a spoiled boy.
He was always delicate in health. Temperamentally, he
belonged to that class of poets who Taine says are ves-
sels too weak to contain the spirit of poetry, the poets
whom poetry kills, the Byrons, the Burns*s, the De
Mussets, the Poes.
To whom may he be compared, this boy who scribbled
his early verses while he ran an elevator, whose youth
was a battle against poverty, and wh6, in spite of almost
insurmountable obstacles, rose to success? A comparison
between him and Burns is not unfitting. The similarity
between many phases of their lives is remarkable, and
their works are not incommensurable. Burns took the
strong dialect of his people and made it classic; Dunbar
took the humble speech of his people and in it wrought
music.
xxxvi Preface
Mention of Dunbar brings up for consideration the
fact that, although he is the most outstanding figure in
literature among the Aframericans of the United States,
he does not stand alone among the Aframericans of the
whole Western world. There are Placido and Manzano
in Cuba; Vieux and Durand in Haiti, Machado de Assis
in Brazil; Leon Laviaux in Martinique, and others still
that might be mentioned, who stand on a plane with or
even above Dunbar. Placido and Machado de Assis rank
as great in the literatures of their respective countries
without any qualifications whatever. They are world
figures in the literature of the Latin languages. Machado
de Assis is somewhat handicapped in this respect by hav-
ing as his tongue and medium the lesser known Portu-
guese, but Placido, writing in the language of Spain,
Mexico, Cuba and of almost the whole of South America,
is universally known. His works have been republished
in the original in Spain, Mexico and in most of the
Latin- American countries ; several editions have been pub-
lished in the United States; translations of his works
have been made into French and German.
Placido is in some respects the greatest of all the Cuban
poets. In sheer genius and the fire of inspiration he sur-
passes even the more finished Heredia. Then, too, his
birth, his life and his death ideally contained the tragic
elements that go into the making of a halo about a poet's
head. Placido was born in Habana in 1809. The first
months of his life were passed in a foundling asylum ; in-
deed, his real name, Gabriel de la Concepcion Valdes,
was in honor of its founder. His father took him out
of the asylum, but shortly afterwards went to Mexico and
Preface xxxvii
died there. His early life was a struggle against pov-
erty; his youth and manhood was a struggle for Cuban
independence. His death placed him in the list of Cuban
martyrs. On the 27th of June, 1844, he was lined up
against a wall with ten others and shot by order of the
Spanish authorities on a charge of conspiracy. In his
short but eventful life he turned out work which bulks
more than six hundred pages. During the few hours pre-
ceding his execution he wrote three of his best known
poems, among them his famous sonnet, "Mother, Fare-
well!"
Placi'do's sonnet to his mother has been translated into
every important language; William Cullen Bryant did
it in English; but in spite of its wide popularity, it is,
perhaps, outside of Cuba the least understood of all
Placido's poems. It is curious to note how Bryant's trans-
lation totally misses the intimate sense of the delicate sub-
tility of the poem. The American poet makes it a tender
and loving farewell of a son who is about to die to a
heart-broken mother; but that is not the kind of a fare-
well that Placido intended to write or did write.
The key to the poem is in the first word, and the first
word is the Spanish conjunction Si (if). The central
idea, then, of the sonnet is, "If the sad fate which now
overwhelms me should bring a pang to your heart, do
not weep, for I die a glorious death and sound the last
note of my lyre to you." Bryant either failed to under-
stand or ignored the opening word, "If," because he was
not familiar with the poet's history.
While Placido's father was a Negro, his mother was
a Spanish white woman, a dancer in one of the Habana
XXX VI 11 Preface
theatres. At his birth she abandoned him to a foundh'ng
asylum, and perhaps never saw him again, although it is
known that she outlived her son. When the poet came
down to his last hours he remembered that somewhere
there lived a woman who was his mother; that although
she had heartlessly abandoned him; that although he
owed her no filial duty, still she might, perhaps, on hear-
ing of his sad end feel some pang of grief or sadness; so
he tells her in his last words that he dies happy and
bids her not to weep. This he does with nobility and
dignity, but absolutely without affection. Taking into
account these facts, and especially their humiliating and
embittering effect upon a soul so sensitive as Placido's,
this sonnet, in spite of the obvious weakness of the sestet
as compared with the octave, is a remarkable piece of
work.^
In considering the Aframerlcan poets of the Latin lan-
guages I am impelled to think that, as up to this time
the colored poets of greater universality have come out
of the Latin-American countries rather than out of the
United States, they will continue to do so for a good
many years. The reason for this I hinted at in the first
part of this preface. The colored poet in the United
States labors within limitations which he cannot easily
pass over. He is always on the defensive or the offensive.
The pressure upon him to be propagandic is well nigh
irresistible. These conditions are suffocating to breadth
and to real art in poetry. In addition he labors under
the handicap of finding culture not entirely colorless in
iPUcido*s sonnet and two English versions "will be found in
die Appendix.
Preface xxxix
the United States. On the other hand, the colored poet of
Latin-America can voice the national spirit without any
reservations. And he will be rewarded without any res-
ervations, whether it be to place him among the great or
declare him the greatest.
So I think it probable that the first world-acknowledged
Aframerican poet will come out of Latin-America. Over
against this probability, of course, is the great advantage
possessed by the colored poet in the United States of
writing in the world-conquering English language.
This preface has gone far beyond what I had in mind
when I started. It was my intention to gather together
the best verses I could find by Negro poets and present
them with a bare word of introduction. It was not my
plan to make this collection inclusive nor to make the
book in any sense a book of criticism. I planned to pre-
sent only verses by contemporary writers; but, perhaps,
because this is the first collection of its kind, I realized
the absence of a starting-point and was led to provide one
and to fill in with historical data what I felt to be a
gap.
It may be surprising to many to see how little of the
poetry being written by Negro poets to-day is being writ-
ten in Negro dialect. The newer Negro poets show a
tendency to discard dialect; much of the subject-matter
which went into the making of traditional dialect poetry,
*possums, watermelons, etc., they have discarded alto-
gether, at least, as poetic material. This tendency will, no
doubt, be regretted by the majority of white readers;
and, indeed, it would be a distinct loss if the American
xl Preface
Negro poets threw away this quaint and musical folk-
speech as a medium of expression. And yet, after all,
these poets are working through a problem not realized
by the reader, and, perhaps, by many of these poets them-
selves not realized consciously. They are trying to break
away from, not Negro dialect itself, but the limitations
on Negro dialect imposed by the fixing effects of long
convention.
The Negro in the United States has achieved or been
placed in a certain artistic niche. When he is thought
of artistically, it is as a happy-go-lucky, singing, shuffling,
banjo-picking being or as a more or less pathetic figure.
The picture of him is in a log cabin amid fields of cotton
or along the levees. Negro dialect is naturally and by
long assodation the exact instrument for voicing this
phase of Negro life; and by that very exactness it is an
instrument with but two full stops, humor and pathos.
So even when he confines himself to purely racial themes,
the Aframerican poet realizes that there are phases of
Negro life in the United States which cannot be treated
in the dialect either adequately or artistically. Take,
for example, the phases rising out of life in Harlem, that
most wonderful Negro city in the world. I do not deny
that a Negro in a log cabin is more picturesque than a
Negro in a Harlem flat, but the Negro in the Harlem
flat is here, and he is but part of a group growing every-
where in the country, a group whose ideals are becom-
ing increasingly more vital than those of the traditionally
artistic group, even if its members are less picturesque.
What the colored poet in the United States needs to
do is something like what Synge did for the Irish; he needs
Preface xli
to find a form that will express the racial spirit by
symbols from within rather than by symbols from with-
out, such as the mere mutilation of English spelling
and pronunciation. He needs a form that is freer and
larger than dialect, but which will still hold the racial
flavor; a form expressing the imagery, the idioms, the
peculiar turns of thought, and the distinctive humor and
pathos, too, of the Negro, but which will also be capable
of voicing the deepest and highest emotions and aspira-
tions, and allow of the widest range of subjects and the
widest scope of treatment.
Negro dialect is at present a mediimi that is not ca-
pable of giving expression to the varied conditions of
Negro life in America, and much less is it capable of
giving the fullest interpretation of Negro character and
psycholog>\ This is no indictment against the dialect
as dialect, but against the mould of convention in which
Negro dialect in the United States has been set. In
time these conventions may become lost, and the colored
poet in the United States may sit down to write in dialect
without feeling that his first line will put the general
reader in a frame of mind which demands that the poem
be humorous or pathetic. In the meantime, there is no
reason why these poets should not continue to do the
beautiful things that can be done, and done best, in the
dialect.
In stating the need for Aframerican poets in the United
States to work out a new and distinctive form of ex-
pression I do not wish to be understood to hold any
theory that they should limit themselves to Negro poetry,
to racial themes; the sooner they are able to write Ameri-
xlii Preface
c€in poetry spontaneously, the better. Nevertheless, I
believe that the richest contribution the Negro poet can
make to the American literature of the future will be the
fusion into it of his own individual artistic gifts.
Not many of the writers here included, except Dun-
bar, are known at all to the general reading public; and
there is only one of these who has a widely recognized
position in the American literary world, he is William
Stanley Braithwaite. Mr. Braithwaite is not only unique
in this respect, but he stands unique among all the
Aframerican writers the United States has yet produced.
He has gained his place, taking as the standard and meas-
ure for his work the identical standard and measure
applied to American writers and American literature.
He has asked for no allowances or rewards, either di'
rectly or indirectly, on account of his race.
Mr. Braithwaite is the author of two volumes of
verses, lyrics of delicate and tenuous beauty. In his more
recent and uncollected poems he shows himself more and
more decidedly the mystic. But his place in American
literature is due more to his work as a critic and
anthologist than to his work as a poet. There is
still another role he has played, that of friend of poetry
and poets. It is a recognized fact that in the work
which preceded the present revival of poetry in the United
States, no one rendered more unremitting and valuable
service than Mr. Braithwaite. And it can be said that
no future study of American poetry of this age can be
made without reference to Braithwaite.
Two authors included in the book are better known
Preface xliii
for their work in prose than in poetry : W. E. B. Du Bois
whose well-known prose at its best is, however, impas-
sioned and rhythmical; and Benjamin Brawley who is
the author, among other works, of one of the best hand-
books on the English drama that has yet appeared in
America.
But the group of the new Negro poets, whose work
makes up the bulk of this anthology, contains names
destined to be known. Claude McKay, although still
quite a young man, has already demonstrated his power,
breadth and skill as a poet. Mr. McKay's breadth
is as essential a part of his equipment as his power and
skill. He demonstrates mastery of the three when as a
Negro poet he pours out the bitterness and rebellion in
his heart m those two sonnet-tragedies, "If We Must
Die" and "To the White Fiends," in a manner that
strikes terror; and when as a cosmic poet he creates the
atmosphere and mood of poetic beauty in the absolute,
as he does in "Spring in New Hampshire" and "The
Harlem Dancer." Mr. McKay gives evidence that he
has passed beyond the danger which threatens many of
the new Negro poets — the danger of allowing the purely
polemical phases of the race problem to choke their sense
of artistry.
Mr. McKay's earliest work is unknown in this coun-
try. It consists of poems written and published in his
native Jamaica. I was fortunate enough to run across
this first volume, and I could not refrain from repro-
ducing here one of the poems written in. the West
Indian Negro dialect. I have done this not only to
illustrate the widest range of the poet's talent and to
xliv Preface
offer a comparison between the American and the West
Indian dialects, but on account of the intrinsic worth
of the poem itself. I was much tempted to Introduce
several more, in spite of the fact that they might require
a glossary, because however greater work Mr. McKay
may do he can never do anything more touching and
charming than these poems In the Jamaica dialect.
Fenton Johnson is a young poet of the ultra-modern
school who gives promise of greater work than he has
yet done. Jessie Fauset shows that she possesses the
lyric gift, and she works with care and finish. Miss
Fauset is especially adept in her translations from the
French. Georgia Douglas Johnson is a poet neither
afraid nor ashamed of her emotions. She limits herself
to the purely conventional forms, rhythms and rhymes, but
through them she achieves striking effects. The principal
theme of Mrs. Johnson's poems is the secret dread down
in every woman's heart, the dread of the passing of youth
and beauty, and with them love. An old theme, one
which poets themselves have often wearied of, but which,
like death, remains one of the imperishable themes on
which is made the poetry that has moved men's hearts
through all ages. In her ingenuously wrought verses,
through sheer simplicity and spontaneousness, Mrs. John-
son often sounds a note of pathos or passion that will not
fail to waken a response, except in those too sophisticated
or cynical to respond to natural impulses. Of the half
dozen or so of colored women writing creditable verse,
Anne Spencer is the most modern and least obvious in
her methods. Her lines are at times involved and turgid
and almost cryptic, but she shows an originality which
Preface xlv
does not depend upon eccentricities. In her "Before the
Feast of Shushan" she displays an opulence, the love of
which has long been charged against the Negro as one
of his naive and childish traits, but w^hich in art may-
infuse a much needed color, warmth and spirit of abandon
into American poetry.
John W. Holloway, more than any Negro poet writ-
ing in the dialect to-day, summons to his work the lilt,
the spontaneity and charm of which Dunbar was the
supreme master whenever he employed that medium. It
is well to say a word here about the dialect poems of
James Edwin Campbell. In dialect, Campbell was a
precursor of Dunbar. A comparison of his idioms and
phonetics with those of Dunbar reveals great differences.
Dunbar is a shade or two more sophisticated and his
phonetics approach nearer to a mean standard of the
dialects spoken in the different sections. Campbell is
more primitive and his phonetics are those of the dialect
as spoken by the Negroes of the sea islands off the coasts
of South Carolina and Georgia, which to this day remains
comparatively close to its African roots, and is strikingly
similar to the speech of the uneducated Negroes of the
West Indies. An error that confuses many persons in
reading or understanding Negro dialect is the idea that
it is uniform. An ignorant Negro of the uplands of
Georgia would have almost as much difficulty in under-
standing an ignorant sea island Negro as an Englishman
would have. Not even in the dialect of any particular
section is a given word always pronounced in precisely
the same way. Its pronunciation depends upon the pre-
ceding and following sounds. Sometimes the combina-
xlvi Preface
tion permits of a liaison so close that to the uninitiated
the sound of the word is almost completely lost.
The constant effort in Negro dialect is to elide all
troublesome consonants and sounds. This negative effort
may be after all only positive laziness of the vocal organs,
but the result is a softening and smoothing which makes
Negro dialect so delightfully easy for singers.
Daniel Webster Davis wrote dialect poetry at the
time when Dunbar was writing. He gained great popu-
larity, but it did not spread beyond his own race. Davis
had unctuous humor, but he was crude. For illustra-
tion, note the vast stretch between his "Hog Meat" and
Dunbar's "When de Co'n Pone's Hot," both of them
poems on the traditional ecstasy of the Negro in con-
templation of "good things" to eat.
It Is regrettable that two of the most gifted writers
included were cut off so early in life. R. C. Jamison
and Joseph S. Cotter, Jr., died several years ago, both of
them in their youth. Jamison was barely thirty at the
time of his death, but among his poems there is one, at
least, which stamps him as a poet of superior talent and
lofty inspiration. "The Negro Soldiers" is a poem with
the race problem as its theme, yet it transcends the limits
of race and rises to a spiritual height that makes it one
of the noblest poems of the Great War. Cotter died a
mere boy of twenty, and the latter part of that brief
period he passed in an invalid state. Some months before
his death he published a thin volume of verses which
were for the most part written on a sick bed. In this
little volume Cotter showed fine poetic sense and a free
and bold mastery over his material. A reading of Cot-
Preface xlvii
ter's poems Is certain to induce that mood in which one
will regretfully speculate on what the young poet might
have accomplished had he not been cut off so soon.
As intimated above, my original idea for this book
underwent a change in the writing of the introduction.
I first planned to select twenty-five to thirty poems which
I judged to be up to a certain standard, and offer them
with a few words of introduction and without comment.
In the collection, as it grew to be, that "certain standard"
has been broadened if not lowered; but I believe that
this is offset by the advantage of the wider range given
the reader and the student of the subject.
I offer this collection without making apology or asking
allowance. I feel confident that the reader will find not
only an earnest for the future, but actual achievement.
The reader cannot but be impressed by the distance al-
ready covered. It is a long way from the plaints of
George Horton to the invectives of Claude McKay, from
the obviousness of Frances Harper to the complexness of
Anne Spencer. Much ground has been covered, but more
will yet be covered. It is this side of prophecy to declare
that the undeniable creative genius of the Negro is des-
tined to make a distinctive and valuable contribution to
American poetry.
I wish to extend my thanks to Mr. Arthur A. Schom-
burg, who placed his valuable collection of books by
Negro authors at my disposal. I wish also to acknowledge
with thanks the kindness of Dodd, Mead & Co. for per-
mitting the reprint of poems by Paul Laurence Dunbar;
xlviii Preface
of the Cornhill Publishing Company for permission to
reprint poems of Georgia Douglas Johnson, Joseph S.
Cotter, Jr., Bertram Johnson and Waverley Carmichael;
and of Neale & Co. for permission to reprint poems of
John W. Hollo way. I wish to thank Mr. Braithwaite
for permission to use the included poems from his forth-
coming volume, "Sandy Star and Willie Gee." And to
acknowledge the courtesy of the following magazines:
The CrisiSj The Century Magazine, The Liberator, The
Freeman, The Independent, Others, and Poetry: A
Magazine of Verse.
James Weldon Johnson.
New York City, 1921.
The Book of
American Negro Poetry
Paul Laurence Dunbar
A NEGRO LOVE SONG^
Seen my lady home las' night,
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Hel' huh han' an' sque'z it tight,
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Hyeahd huh sigh a little sigh,
Seen a light gleam f'om huh eye,
An' a smile go flittin' by —
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Hyeahd de win' blow thoo de pine,
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Mockin'-bird was singin' fine.
Jump back, honey, jump back.
An' my hea't was beatin' so.
When I reached my lady's do',
Dat I could n't ba' to go —
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Put my ahm aroun' huh wais',
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Raised huh lips an' took a tase.
Jump back, honey, jump back.
^ Copyright by Dodd, Mead & Company.
3
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Love me, honey, love me true?
Love me well ez I love you ?
An* she answe'd, "Cose I do" —
Jump back, honey, jump back.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
LITTLE BROWN BABY
Little brown baby wif spa'klln* eyes,
Come to yo' pappy an' set on his knee.
What you been doin*, suh — makin' san' pies?
Look at dat bib — You's ez du'ty ez me.
Look at dat mouf — dat's merlasses, I bet;
Come hyeah, Maria, an' wipe off his ban's.
Bees gwine to ketch you an' eat you up yit,
Bein' so sticky an' sweet — goodness lan's!
Little brown baby wif spa'klin' eyes
Who's pappy 's darlin' an' who's pappy's chile?
Who is it all de day nevah once tries
Fu' to be cross, er once loses dat smile ?
Whah did you git dem teef ? My, you's a scamp !
Whah did dat dimple come f om in yo' chin ?
Pappy do* know you — I b'lieves you's a tramp ;
Mammy, dis hyeah's some ol' straggler got in!
Let's th'ow him outen de do' in de san'.
We do' want stragglers a-layin' 'roun' hyeah;
Let's gin him 'way to de big buggah-man ;
I know he's hidin' erroun' hyeah right neah.
Buggah-man, buggah-man, come in de do',
Hyeah's a bad boy you kin have fu' to eat.
Mammy an' pappy do' want him no mo',
Swaller him down f'om his haid to his feet!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Dah, now, I t'ought dat you'd hug me up close.
Go back, oF buggah, you sha'n't have dis boy.
He ain't no tramp, ner no straggler, of co'se ;
He's pappy's pa'dner an' playmate an' joy.
Come to you' pallet now — go to you' res' ;
Wisht you could alius know ease an' cleah skies;
Wisht you could stay jes' a chile on my breas' —
Little brown baby wif spa'klin' eyes!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT
Out in the sky the great dark clouds are massing;
I look far out into the pregnant night,
Where I can hear a solemn booming gun
And catch the gleaming of a random light,
That tells me that the ship I seek is passing, passing.
My tearful eyes my soul's deep hurt are glassing;
For I would hail and check that ship of ships.
I stretch my hands imploring, cry aloud,
My voice falls dead a foot from mine own lips,
And but its ghost doth reach that vessel, passing, passing.
O Earth, O Sky, O Ocean, both surpassing,
O heart of mine, O soul that dreads the dark!
Is there no hope for me? Is there no way
That I may sight and check that speeding bark
Which out of sight and sound is passing, passing?
8 Paul Laurence Dunbar
LOVER'S LANE
Summah night an' sighin' breeze,
'Long de lovah's lane;
Frien'ly, shadder-mekin' trees,
'Long de lovah's lane.
White folks' wo'k all done up gran'-
Me an' 'Mandy han'-in-han'
Struttin' lak we owned de Ian',
'Long de lovah's lane.
Owl a-settin' 'side de road,
'Long de lovah's lane,
Lookin' at us lak he knowed
Dis uz lovah's lane.
Go on, hoot yo' Mou'nful tune,
You ain' nevah loved in June,
An' come hidin' f om de moon
Down in lovah's lane.
Bush it ben' an' nod an' sway,
Down in lovah's lane,
Try'n' to hyeah me whut I say
'Long de lovah's lane.
But I whispahs low lak dis.
An' my 'Mandy smile huh bliss —
Mistah Bush he shek his fis',
Down in lovah's lane.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Whut I keer ef day is long,
Down in lovah's lane.
I kin alius sing a song
*Long de lovah's lane.
An' de wo'ds I hyeah an* say
Meks up fu' de weary day
Wen I's strollin' by de way,
Down in lovah's lane.
An' dis t'ought will alius rise
Down in lovah's lane ;
Wondah whethah in de skies
Dey's a lovah's lane.
Ef dey ain't, I tell you true,
'Ligion do look mighty blue,
'Cause I do' know whut I'd do
'Dout a lovah's lane.
lO Paul Laurence Dunbar
THE DEBT
This is the debt I pay-
Just for one riotous day,
Years of regret and grief,
Sorrow without relief.
Pay it I will to the end
Until the grave, my friend.
Gives me a true release —
Gives me the clasp of peace.
Slight was the thing I bought,
Small was the debt I thought,
Poor was the loan at best —
God! but the interest!
Paul Laurence Dunbar ii
THE HAUNTED OAK
Pray why are you so bare, so bare,
Oh, bough of the old oak-tree;
And why, when I go through the shade you throw,
Runs a shudder over me?
My leaves were green as the best, I trow,
And sap ran free in my veins.
But I saw in the moonlight dim and weird
A guiltless victim's pains.
I bent me down to hear his sigh ;
I shook with his gurgling moan,
And I trembled sore when they rode away,
And left him here alone.
They'd charged him with the old, old crime,
And set him fast in jail :
Oh, why does the dog howl all night long,
And why does the night wind wail?
He prayed his prayer and he swore his oath,
And he raised his hand to the sky;
But the beat of hoofs smote on his ear.
And the steady tread drew nigh.
Who is it rides by night, by night,
Over the moonlit road?
And what is the spur that keeps the pace,
What is the galling goad?
(12 Paul Laurence Dunbar
And now they beat at the prison door,
"Ho, keeper, do not stay!
We are friends of him whom you hold within,
And we fain would take him away
"From those who ride fast on our heels
With mind to do him wrong;
They have no care for his innocence,
And the rope they bear is long."
They have fooled the jailer with lying words,
They have fooled the man with lies ;
The bolts unbar, the locks are drawn.
And the great door open flies.
Now they have taken him from the jail.
And hard and fast they ride,
And the leader laughs low down in his throat,
As they halt my trunk beside.
Oh, the judge, he wore a mask of black,
And the doctor one of white,
And the minister, with his oldest son.
Was curiously bedight.
Oh, foolish man, why weep you now?
*Tis but a little space.
And the time will come when these shall dread
The mem'ry of your face. k
I feel the rope against my bark.
And the weight of him in my grain,
I feel in the throe of his final woe
The touch of my own last pain.
Paul Laurence Dunbar 13
And never more shall leaves come forth
On a bough that bears the ban ;
I am burned with dread, I am dried and dead,
From the curse of a guiltless man.
And ever the judge rides by, rides by,
And goes to hunt the deer,
And ever another rides his soul
In the guise of a mortal fear.
And ever the man he rides me hard,
And never a night stays he;
For I feel his curse as a haunted bough
On the trunk of a haunted tree.
;I4 Paul Laurence Dunbar
WHEN DE CO'N PONE'S HOT
Dey is times in life when Nature
Seems to slip a cog an' go,
Jes' a-rattlin' down creation,
Lak an ocean's overflow;
When de worl' jes' stahts a-spinnin*
Lak a picaninny's top,
An' yo' cup o' joy is brimmin'
'Twell it seems about to slop,
An' you feel jes' lak a racah,
Dat is trainin' fu' to trot —
When yo' mammy says de blessin'
An' de co'n pone's hot.
When you set down at de table.
Kin' o' weary lak an' sad.
An* you'se jes' a little tiahed
An' purhaps a little mad;
How yo' gloom tu'ns into gladness.
How yo' joy drives out de doubt
When de oven do' Is opened,
An' de smell comes po'in' out;
Why, de 'lectric light o* Heaven
Seems to settle on de spot.
When yo' mammy says de blessin* .
An' de co'n pone's hot.
When de cabbage pot is steamin*
An' de bacon good an' fat.
Paul Laurence Dunbar 15
When de chittlins is a-sputter'n'
So's to show you whah dey's at ;
Tek away yo' sody biscuit,
Tek away yo' cake an' pie,
Fu' de glory time is comin*,
An' it's 'proachin' mighty nigh,
An' you want to jump an' hollah,
Dough you know you'd bettah not;
When yo' mammy says de blessin'
An' de co'n pone's hot.
I have hyeahd o' lots o' sermons,
An' I've hyeahd o' lots o' prayers,
An' I've listened to some singin'
Dat has tuck me up de stairs
Of de Glory-Lan' an' set me
Jes' below de Mastah's th'one,
An' have lef my hea't a-singin'
In a happy aftah tone;
But dem wu'ds so sweetly murmured
Seem to tech de softes' spot,
When my mammy says de blessin*,
An* de co'n pone's hot.
i6 Paul Laurence Dunbar
A DEATH SONG
Lay me down beneaf de willers in de grass,
Whah de branch'll go a-singin* as it pass
An' w'en I's a-layin' low,
I kin hyeah it as it go
Singin', ''Sleep, my honey, tek yo* res* at las'."
Lay me nigh to whah hit meks a little pool,
An' de watah Stan's so quiet lak an' cool,
Whah de little birds in spring,
Ust to come an* drink an' sing,
An' de chillen waded on dey way to school.
Let me settle w'en my shouldahs draps dey load
Nigh enough to hyeah de noises in de road ;
Fu' I t'ink de las' long res'
Gwine to soothe my sperrit bes'
If I's layin* *mong de t'ings I's alius knowed.
James Edwin Campbell
NEGRO SERENADE
O, de light-bugs glimmer down de lane,
Merlindy ! Merlindy !
O, de whip'-will callin' notes ur pain —
Merlindy, O, Merlindy!
O, honey lub, my turkle dub,
Doan' you hyuh my bawnjer ringin*,
While de night-dew falls an* de ho'n owl calls
By de oF ba'n gate Ise singin'.
O, Miss 'Lindy, doan' you hyuh me, chil*,
Merlindy ! Merlindy !
My lub fur you des dribe me wil' —
Merlindy, O, Merlindy!
I'll sing dis night twel broad day-light,
Ur bu's' my froat wid tryin*,
'Less you come down, Miss 'Lindy Brown,
An' stops dis ha't f 'um sighin' !
17
1 8 James Edwin Campbell
DE CUNJAH MAN
O chillen, run, de Cunjah man,
Him mouf ez beeg ez fryin' pan,
Him yurs am small, him eyes am raid,
Him hab no toof een him ol' haid,
Him hab him roots, him wu'k him trick,
Him roll him eye, him mek you sick —
De Cunjah man, de Cunjah man,
O chillen, run, de Cunjah man!
Him hab ur ball ob raid, raid ha'r,
Him hide it un* de kitchen sta'r.
Mam Jude huh pars urlong dat way,
An' now huh hab ur snaik, de say.
Him wrop ur roun' huh buddy tight,
Huh eyes pop out, ur orful sight —
De Cunjah man, de Cunjah man,
O chillen, run, de Cunjah man!
Miss Jane, huh dribe him f*um huh do*,
An* now huh hens woan* lay no mo* ;
De Jussey cow huh done fall sick.
Hit all done by de Cunjah trick.
Him put ur root un* *Lijah*s baid,
An* now de man he sho* am daid —
De Cunjah man, de Cunjah man,
O chillen, run, de Cunjah man!
James Edwin Campbell 19
Me see him stan' de yudder night
Right een de road een white moon-Hght;
Him toss him arms, him whirl him 'roun^
Him stomp him foot urpon de groun';
De snaiks come crawlin', one by one,
Me hyuh um hiss, me break an' run —
De Cunjah man, de Cunjah man,
O chillen, run, de Cunjah man!
20 James Edwin Campbell
UNCLE EPH'S BANJO SONG
Clean de ba'n an' sweep de flo',
Sing, my bawnjer, sing!
We's gwine ter dawnce dis eb'nin' sho*,
Ring, my bawnjer, ring!
Den hits up de road an' down de lane,
Hurry, niggah, you miss de train ;
De yaller gal she dawnce so neat,
De yaller gal she look so sweet,
Ring, my bawnjer, ring!
De moon come up, de sun go down,
Sing, my bawnjer, sing!
De niggahs am all come f um town,
Ring, my bawnjer, ring!
Den hits roun' de hill an' f roo de fiel*— •
Lookout dar, niggah, doan' you steal!
De milyuns on dem vines am green,
De moon am bright, O you'll be seen,
Ring, my bawnjer, ring!
James Edwin Campbell 21
OL' DOC HYAR
Ur ol' Hyar lib in ur house on de hill,
He hunner yurs oV an' nebber wuz ill ;
He yurs dee so long an* he eyes so beeg,
An' he laigs so spry dat he dawnce ur jeeg;
He lib so long dat he know ebbry tings
'Bout de beas'ses dat walks an* de bu'ds dat sings —
Dis or Doc* Hyar,
Whar lib up dar
Een ur mighty fine house on ur mighty high hill.
He doctah fur all de beas*ses an* bu*ds —
He put on he specs, an* he use beeg wu*ds,
He feel dee pu*s* den he look mighty wise,
He pull out he watch an* he shet bof e eyes ;
He grab up he hat an* grab up he cane,
Den — "blam!" go de do* — he gone lak de train,
Dis or Doc' Hyar,
Whar lib up dar
Een ur mighty fine house on ur mighty high hill.
Mistah Ba'r fall sick — dee sont fur Doc' Hyar,
"O, Doctah, come queeck, an* eee Mr. B'ar ;
He mighty nigh daid des sho' ez you b*on !'*
"Too much ur young peeg, too much ur green co'n,"
Ez he put on he hat, said Ol* Doc* Hyar ;
"I'll tek 'long meh lawnce, an' lawnce Mistah B'ar,"
Said or Doc* Hyar,
Whar lib up dar
Een ur mighty fine house on ur miehtv hieh hill.
22 James Edwin Campbell
Mfstah B'ar he groaned, Mistah B'ar he growled,
Wile de ol' Miss B'ar an' de chillen howled ;
Doctah Hyar tuk out he sha'p li'l lawnce,
An' pyu'ced Mistah B'ar twel he med him prawnce
Den grab up he hat an' grab up he cane
**Blam!'* go de do' an' he gone lak de train,
Dis or Doc' Hyar,
Whar lib up dar
Een ur mighty fine house on ur mighty high hill.
But de vay naix day Mistah B'ar he daid;
Wen dee tell Doc' Hyar, he des scratch he haid :
*'Ef pahsons git well ur pahsons git wu's,
Money got ter come een de Ol' Hyar's pu's ;
Not wut folkses does, but fur wut dee' know
Does de folkses git paid" — an' Hyar larfed low,
Dis sma't Ol' Hyar,
Whar lib up dar
Een de mighty fine house on de mighty high hill !
James Edwin Campbell 23
WHEN OL* SIS' JUDY PRAY
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
De teahs come stealin' down my cheek,
De voice ur God widin me speak' ;
I see myse'f so po' an* weak,
Down on my knees de cross I seek,
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
De thun'ers ur Mount Sin-a-i
Comes rushin' down f'um up on high —
De Debbil tu'n his back an' fly
While sinnahs loud fur pa'don cry,
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
Ha'd sinnahs trimble in dey seat
Ter hyuh huh voice in sorro 'peat :
(While all de chu'ch des sob an' weep)
*'0 Shepa'd, dese, dy po' los' sheep!"
When ol' Sis* Judy pray.
When ol' Sis* Judy pray,
De whole house hit des rock an' moan
Ter see huh teahs an' hyuh huh groan ;
Dar's somepin* in Sis' Judy's tone
Dat melt all ha'ts dough med ur stone
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
24 James Edwin Campbell
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
Salvation's light comes pourin' down —
Hit fill de chu'ch an' all de town —
Why, angels' robes go rustlin' 'roun',
An' hebben on de Yurf am foun',
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
When ol' Sis' Judy pray,
My soul go sweepin' up on wings,
An' loud de chu'ch wid "Glory!" rings,
An' wide de gates ur Jahsper swings
Twel you hyuh ha'ps wid golding strings,
When ol' Sis' Judy pray.
James Edwin Campbell 25
COMPENSATION
O, rich young lord, thou rfdest by
With looks of high disdain ;
It chafes me not thy title high,
Thy blood of oldest strain.
The lady riding at thy side
Is but in name thy promised bride,
Ride on, young lord, ride on !
Her father wills and she obeys.
The custom of her class ;
'Tis Land not Love the trothing sways —
For Land he sells his lass.
Her fair white hand, young lord, is thine,
Her soul, proud fool, her soul is mine,
Ride on, young lord, ride on !
No title high my father bore ;
The tenant of thy farm.
He left me what I value more :
Clean heart, clear brain, strong arm
And love for bird and beast and bee
And song of lark and hymn of sea,
Ride on, young lord, ride on !
The boundless sky to me belongs,
The paltry acres thine ;
26 James Edwin Campbell
The painted beauty sings thy songs,
The lavrock lilts me mine ;
The hot-housed orchid blooms for thee,
The gorse and heather bloom for me,
Ride on, young lord, ride on I
James D. Corrothers
AT THE CLOSED GATE OF JUSTICE
To be a Negro in a day like this
Demands forgiveness. Bruised with blow on blow,
Betrayed, like him whose woe dimmed eyes gave bliss
Still must one succor those who brought one low,
To be a Negro in a day like this.
To be a Negro in a day like this
Demands rare patience — patience that can wait
In utter darkness. Tis the path to miss,
And knock, unheeded, at an iron gate,
To be a Negro in a day like this.
To be a Negro in a day like this
Demands strange loyalty. We serve a flag
Which is to us white freedom's emphasis.
Ah ! one must love when Truth and Justice lag,
To be a Negro in a day like this.
To be a Negro in a day like this —
Alas! Lord God, what evil have we done?
Still shines the gate, all gold and amethyst.
But I pass by, the glorious goal unwon,
"Merely a Negro" — in a day like this!
27
28 James D. Corrothers
PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR
He came, a youth, singing in the dawn
Of a new freedom, glowing o'er his lyre,
Refining, as with great Apollo's fire,
His people's gift of song. And thereupon,
This Negro singer, come to Helicon
Constrained the masters, listening to admire,
And roused a race to wonder and aspire,
Gazing which way their honest voice was gone,
With ebon face uplit of glory's crest.
Men marveled at the singer, strong and sweet,
Who brought the cabin's mirth, the tuneful night,
But faced the morning, beautiful with light.
To die while shadows yet fell toward the west,
And leave his laurels at his people's feet.
Dunbar, no poet wears your laurels now ;
None rises, singing, from your race like you.
Dark melodist, immortal, though the dew
Fell early on the bays upon your brow,
And tinged with pathos every halcyon vow
And brave endeavor. Silence o'er you threw
Flowerets of love. Or, if an envious few
Of your own people brought no garlands, how
Could Malice smite him whom the gods had crowned?
If, like the meadow-lark, your flight was low
Your flooded lyrics half the hilltops drowned ;
A wide world heard you, and it loved you so
It stilled its heart to list the strains you sang,
And o'er your happy songs its plaudits rang.
James D. Corr others 29
THE NEGRO SINGER
O'er all my song the image of a face
Lieth, like shadow on the wild sweet flowers.
The dream, the ecstasy that prompts my powers ;
The golden lyre's delights bring little grace
To bless the singer of a lowly race.
Long hath this mocked me : aye in marvelous hours,
When Hera's gardens gleamed, or Cynthia's bowers,
Or Hope's red pylons, in their far, hushed place!
But I shall dig me deeper to the gold ;
Fetch water, dripping, over desert miles,
From clear Nyanzas and mysterious Niles
Of love ; and sing, nor one kind act withhold.
So shall men know me, and remember long,
Nor my dark face dishonor any song.
30 James D. Corr others
THE ROAD TO THE BOW
Ever and ever anon,
After the black storm, the eternal, beauteous bow!
Brother, to rosy-painted mists that arch beyond,
Blithely I go.
My brows men laureled and my lyre
Twined with immortal ivy for one little rippling song;
My "House of Golden Leaves" they praised and "passion-
ate fire" —
But, Friend, the way is long !
Onward and onward, up! away!
Though Fear flaunt all his banners in my face,
And my feet stumble, lo ! the Orphean Day I
Forward by God's grace!
These signs are still before me: "Fear,"
"Danger," "Unprecedented," and I hear black "No"
Still thundering, and "Churl." Good Friend, I rest me
here —
Then to the glittering bow 1
Loometh and cometh Hate in wrath.
Mailed Wrong, swart Servitude and Shame with bitter
rue,
Nathless a Negro poet's feet must tread the path
The winged god knew.
James D. Corr others 31
Thus, my true Brother, dream-led, I
Forefend the anathema, following the span.
I hold my head as proudly high
As any man.
32 James D. Corrothers
IN THE MATTER OF TWO MEN
One does such work as one will not,
And well each knows the right;
Though the white storm howls, or the sun is hot,
The black must serve the white.
And it's, oh, for the white man's softening flesh,
While the black man's muscles grow !
Well I know which grows the mightier,
/ know ; full well I know.
The white man seeks the soft, fat place,
And he moves and he works by rule.
Ingenious grows the humbler race
In Oppression's prodding school.
And it's, oh, for a white man gone to seed,
While the Negro struggles so I
And I know which race develops most,
I know; yes, well I know.
The white man rides in a palace car,
And the Negro rides "Jim Crow.'*
To damn the other with bolt and bar,
One creepeth so low; so low!
And it's, oh, for a master's nose in the mire.
While the humbled hearts o'erflow I
Well I know whose soul grows big at this.
And whose grows small ; / know!
James D. Corrothers 33
The white man leases out his land,
And the Negro tills the same.
One works; one loafs and takes command;
But I know who wins the game!
And it's, oh, for the white man's shrinking soil,
As the black's rich acres grow !
Well I know how the signs point out at last,
I know; ah, well I know!
The white man votes for his color's sake.
While the black, for his is barred ;
(Though "ignorance" is the charge they make),
But the black man studies hard.
And it's, oh, for the white man's sad neglect,
For the power of his light let go!
So, I know which man must win at last,
I know! Ah, Friend, I know!
34 James D. Corrothers
AN INDIGNATION DINNER
Dey was hard times jes fo* Christmas round our neigh-
borhood one year;
So we held a secret meetin', whah de white folks couldn't
hear,
To 'scuss de situation, an' to see what could be done
Towa'd a fust-class Christmas dinneh an' a little Christ-
mas fun.
Rufus Green, who called de meetin', ris an' said : "In dis
here town.
An' throughout de land, de white folks is a-tryin' to keep
us down."
S' 'e: "Dey's bought us, sold us, beat us; now dey 'buse us
'ca'se we's free;
But when dey tetch my stomach, dey's done gone too fur
foh me!
"Is I right?" "You sho is, Rufus!" roared a dozen hun-
gry throats.
"Ef you'd keep a mule a-wo'kin', don't you tamper wid his
oats.
Dat's sense," continued Rufus. "But dese white folks
nowadays
Has done got so close and stingy you can't live on what
dey pays.
"Here 'tis Christmas-time, an*, folkses, I's indignant
'nough to choke.
Whah's our Christmas dinneh comin' when we's 'mos'
completely broke?
James D. Corrothers 35
I can't hahdly 'fo'd a toothpick an' a glass o' water.
Mad?
Say, I'm desp'ret! Dey jes better treat me nice, dese
white folks had!"
Well, dey 'bused de white folks scan'lous, till old Pappy ^
Simmons ris,
Leanin' on his cane to s'pote him, on account his rheu-
matis',
An' s' 'e: "Chilun, whut's dat wintry wind a-sighin'
th'ough de street
'Bout yo' wasted summeh wages? But, no matter, we
mus* eat.
"Now, I seed a beau'ful tuhkey on a certain gemmun's
fahm.
He's a-growin* fat an* sassy, an* a-struttin* to a chahm.
Chickens, sheeps, hogs, sweet pertaters — all de craps is
fine dis year;
All we needs is a committee foh to tote de goodies here.**
Well, we lit right m an* voted dat it was a gran idee,
An' de dinneh we had Christmas was worth trabblin*
miles to see;
An* we eat a full an* plenty, big an* little, great an* small,
Not beca'se we was dishonest, but indignant, sah. Dat's
alL
36 James D, Corrothers
DREAM AND THE SONG
So oft our hearts, beloved lute,
In blossomy haunts of song are mute;
So long we pore, 'mid murmurings dull,
O'er loveliness unutterable.
So vain is all our passion strong!
The dream is lovelier than the song.
The rose thought, touched by words, doth turn
Wan ashes. Still, from memory's urn,
The lingering blossoms tenderly
Refute our wilding minstrelsy.
Alas! we work but beauty's wrong!
The dream is lovelier than the song.
Yearned Shelley o'er the golden flame?
Left Keats for beauty's lure, a name
But "writ in water"? Woe is me!
To grieve o'er flowerful faery.
My Phasian doves are flown so long —
The dream is lovelier than the song!
Ah, though we build a bower of dawn, '
The golden-winged bird is gone.
And morn may gild, through shimmering leaves,
Only the swallow-twittering eaves.
What art may house or gold prolong
A dream far lovelier than a song?
James D. Corrothers 37
The lilting witchery, the unrest
Of winged dreams, is in our breast ;
But ever dear Fulfilment's eyes
Gaze otherward. The long-sought prize,
My lute, must to the gods belong.
The dream is lovelier than the song.
Daniel Webster Davis
WEH DOWN SOUF
O, de birds ar' sweetly singin*,
'Weh down Souf,
An' de banjer is a-ringin*,
'Weh down Souf;
An' my heart it is a-sighin',
Whir de moments am a-flyin',
Fur my horn' I am a-cryin',
'Weh down Souf.
Dar de pickaninnies 's playin*,
'Weh down Souf,
An' fur dem I am a-prayin',
'Weh down Souf;
An' when I gits sum munny,
Yo' kin bet I'm goin', my hunny,
Fur de Ian' dat am so sunny,
'Weh down Souf.
Whir de win' up here's a-blowin*,
'Weh down Souf
De corn is sweetly growin',
*Weh down Souf.
Dey tells me here ub freedum,
But I ain't a-gwine to heed um,
But I'se gwine fur to lebe um.
Fur 'weh down Souf.
39
40 Daniel Webster Davis
I bin up here a-wuckin',
From 'weh down Souf,
An* I ain't a bin a-shurkin' —
I'm fnim 'weh down Souf;
But I'm gittin' mighty werry,
An' de days a-gittin' drerry,
An' I'm hongry, O, so berry,
Fur my hom' down Souf.
O, de moon dar shines de brighter,
*Weh down Souf,
An' I know my heart is lighter,
'Weh down Souf;
An' de berry thought brings pledjur,
I'll be happy dar 'dout medjur,
Fur dar I hab my tredjur,
'Weh down Souf.
Daniel Webster Davis 41
HOG MEAT
Deze eatin* folks may tell me ub de gloriz ub spring lam',
An' de toofsumnis ub tuckey et wid cel'ry an' wid jam;
Ub beef-st'ak fried wid unyuns, an' sezoned up so fine —
But you' jes' kin gimme hog-meat, an' I'm happy all de
time.
When de fros' is on de pun'kin an' de sno'-flakes in de ar',
I den begin rejoicin' — hog-killin' time is near;
An' de vizhuns ub de fucher den fill my nightly dreams,
Fur de time is fas' a-comin' fur de 'lishus pork an' beans.
We folks dat's frum de kuntry may be behin' de sun —
We don't like city eatin's, wid beefsteaks dat ain' done —
'Dough mutton chops is splendid, an' dem veal cutlits
fine,
To me 'tain't like a sphar-rib, or gret big chunk ub chine.
Jes* talk to me 'bout hog-meat, ef yo' want to see me
pleased,
Fur biled wid beans tiz gor'jus, or made in hog-head
cheese;
An' I could jes' be happy, 'dout money, cloze or house,
Wid plenty yurz an' pig feet made in ol'-fashun "souse."
I 'fess I'm only humun, I hab my joys an' cares —
Sum days de clouds hang hebby, sum days de skies ar'
fair;
42 Daniel Webster Davis
But I forgib my in'miz, my heart is free frum hate,
When my bread is filled wid cracklins an' dar's chidlins
on my plate.
'Dough 'possum meat is glo'yus wid *taters in de pan,
But put 'longside pork sassage it takes a backward stan';
Ub all yer fancy eatin's, jes gib to me fur mine
Sum souse or pork or chidlins, sum sphar-rib, or de chine.
William H. A. Moore
DUSK SONG
The garden is very quiet to-night,
The dusk has gone with the Evening Star,
And out on the bay a lone ship light
Makes a silver pathway over the bar
Where the sea sings low.
I follow the light with an earnest eye,
Creeping along to the thick far-away,
Until it fell in the depths of the deep, dark sky
With the haunting dream of the dusk of day
And its lovely glow.
Long nights, long nights and the whisperings of new ones,
Flame the line of the pathway down to the sea
With the halo of new dreams and the hallow of old ones.
And they bring magic light to my love reverie
And a lover's regret.
Tender sorrow for loss of a soft murmured word,
Tender measure of doubt in a faint, aching heart,
Tender listening for wind-songs in the tree heights heard
When you and I were of the dusks a part,
Are with me yet.
43
44 William H. A, Moore
I pray for faith to the noble spirit of Space,
I sound the cosmic depths for the measure of glory
Which will bring to this earth the imperishable race
Of whom Beauty dreamed in the soul-toned story
The Prophets told.
Silence and love and deep wonder of stars
Dust-silver the heavens from west to east,
From south to north, and in a maze of bars
Invisible I wander far from the feast
As night grows old.
Half blind is my vision I know to the truth,
My ears are half deaf to the voice of the tear
That touches the silences as Autumn's ruth
Steals thru the dusks of each returning year
A goodly friend.
The Autumn, then Winter and wintertime's grief!
But the weight of the snow is the glistening gift
Which loving brings to the rose and its leaf,
For the days of the roses glow in the drift
And never end.
The moon has come. Wan and pallid is she.
The spell of half memories, the touch of half tears,
And the wounds of worn passions she brings to me
With all the tremor of the far-off years
And their mad wrong.
William H. A. Moore 45
Yet the garden is very quiet to-night,
The dusk has long gone with the Evening Star,
And out on the bay the moon's wan light
Lays a silver pathway beyond the bar,
Dear heart, pale and long.
46 William H. A. Moore
IT WAS NOT FATE
It was not fate which overtook me,
Rather a wayward, wilful wind
That blew hot for awhile
And then, as the even shadows came, blew cold.
What pity it is that a man grown old in life's dreaming
Should stop, e'en for a moment, to look into a woman's
eyes.
And I forgot!
Forgot that one's heart must be steeled against the east
wind.
Life and death alike come out of the East:
Life as tender as young grass,
Death as dreadful as the sight of clotted blood.
I shall go back into the darkness.
Not to dream but to seek the light again.
I shall go by paths, mayhap.
On roads that wind around the foothills
Where the plains are bare and wild
And the passers-by come few and far between.
I want the night to be long, the moon blind,
The hills thick with moving memories.
And my heart beating a breathless requiem
For all the dead days I have lived.
When the Dawn comes — Dawn, deathless, dreaming—
I shall will that my soul must be cleansed of hate,
I shall pray for strength to hold children close to my
heart.
William H. A. Moore 47
I shall desire to build houses where the poor will know
shelter, comfort, beauty.
And then may I look into a woman's eyes
And find holiness, love and the peace which passeth un-
derstanding.
W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
A LITANY OF ATLANTA
Done at Atlanta, in the Day of Death, 1906
O Silent God, Thou whose voice afar in mist and mys-
tery hath left our ears an-hungered in these fearful days —
Hear us, good Lord!
Listen to us, Thy children: our faces dark with doubt
are made a mockery in Thy sanctuary. With uplifted
hands we front Thy heaven, O God, crying:
We beseech Thee to hear us, good Lord!
We are not better than our fellows. Lord, we are but
weak and human men. When our devils do deviltry,
curse Thou the doer and the deed : curse them as we curse
them, do to them all and more than ever they have done
to innocence and weakness, to womanhood and home.
Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners!
And yet whose is the deeper guilt? Who made these
devils? Who nursed them in crime and fed them on in-
justice? Who ravished and debauched their mothers and
their grandmothers? Who bought and sold their crime,
and waxed fat and rich on public iniquity?
Thou knowestj good God!
49
50 W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
Is this Thy justice, O Father, that guile be easier than
innocence, and the innocent crucified for the guilt of the
untouched guilty?
Justice, O judge of men I
Wherefore do we pray? Is not the God of the fathers
dead? Have not seers seen in Heaven's halls Thine
hearsed and lifeless form stark amidst the black and roll-
ing smoke of sin, vv^here all along bow bitter forms of
endless dead?
Awake, Thou that sleepest!
Thou art not dead, but flown afar, up hills of endless
light, thru blazing corridors of suns, where worlds do
swing of good and gentle men, of women strong and
free — far from the cozenage, black hypocrisy and chaste
prostitution of this shameful speck of dust!
Turn agaiUjO Lord, leave us not to perish in our sin!
From lust of body and lust of blood
Great God, deliver us!
From lust of power and lust of gold,
Great God, deliver us!
From the leagued lying of despot and of brute,
Great God, deliver us!
A city lay in travail, God our Lord, and from her
loins sprang twin Murder and Black Hate. Red was
the midnight ; clang, crack and cry of death and fury filled
W, E. Burghardt Du Bois 51
the air and trembled underneath the stars when church
spires pointed silently to Thee. And all this was to sate
the greed of greedy men who hide behind the veil of
vengeance !
Bend us Thine ear, O Lord!
In the pale, still morning we looked upon the deed.
We stopped our ears and held our leaping hands, but they
— did they not wag their heads and leer and cry with
bloody jaws: Cease from Crime! The word was mock-
cry, for thus they train a hundred crimes while we do
cure one.
Turn again our captivity, O Lord!
Behold this maimed and broken thing; dear God, it was
an humble black man who toiled and sweat to save a bit
from the pittance paid him. They told him : Work and
Rise. He worked. Did this man sin? Nay, but some
one told how some one said another did — one whom he
had never seen nor known. Yet for that man*s crime this
man lieth maimed and murdered, his wife naked to
shame, his children, to poverty and evil.
Hear us, O Heavenly Father!
Doth not this justice of hell stink in Thy nostrils,
O God ? How long shall the mounting flood of innocent
blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for
vengeance? Pile the pale frenzy of blood-crazed brutes
who do such deeds high on Thine altar, Jehovah Jireh,
and burn it in hell forever and forever !
Forgive us, good Lord; we know not what we say!
52 W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
Bewildered we are, and passion-tost, mad with the mad-
ness of a mobbed and mocked and murdered people;
straining at the armposts of Thy Throne, we raise our
shackled hands and charge Thee, God, by the bones of
our stolen fathers, by the tears of our dead mothers, by
the very blood of Thy crucified Christ: What meaneth
this? Tell us the Plan; give us the Sign!
Keep not thou silence, O God!
Sit no longer blind. Lord God, deaf to our prayer
and dumb to our dumb suffering. Surely Thou too art
not white, O Lord, a pale, bloodless, heartless thing?
Ah! Christ of ell the Pities!
Forgive the thought ! Forgive these wild, blasphemous
words. Thou art still the God of our black fathers, and
in Thy soul's soul sit some soft darkenings of the even-
ing, some shadowings of the velvet night.
But whisper — speak — call, great God, for Thy silence
is white terror to our hearts! The way, O God, show
us the way and point us the path.
Whither ? North is greed and South is blood ; within,
the coward, and without, the liar. Whither ? To death ?
Amen! Welcome dark sleep!
Whither? To life? But jiot this life, dear God, not
this. Let the cup pass from us, tempt us not beyond
our strength, for there is that clamoring and clawing
within, to whose voice we would not listen, yet shudder
W, E. Burghardt Du Bois 53
lest we must, and it is red, Ah! God! It is a red and
awful shape.
Selah/
In yonder East trembles a star.
Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord!
Thy will, O Lord, be done !
Kyrie Eleison!
Lord, we have done these pleading, wavering words.
JVe beseech Thee to hear us, good Lord!
We bow our heads and hearken soft to the sobbing of
women and little children.
We beseech Thee to hear us, good Lord!
Our voices sink in silence and in night.
Hear us, good Lord!
In night, O God of a godless land !
Amen!
In silence, O Silent God.
Selah!
George Marion McClellan
DOGWOOD BLOSSOMS
To dreamy languors and the violet mist
Of early Spring, the deep sequestered vale
Gives first her paling-blue Miamimist,
Where blithely pours the cuckoo's annual tale
Of Summer promises and tender green,
Of a new life and beauty yet unseen.
The forest trees have yet a sighing mouth,
Where dying winds of March their branches swing,
While upward from the dreamy, sunny South,
A hand invisible leads on the Spnng,
His rounds from bloom 'to bloom the bee begins
With flying song, and cowslip wine he sups.
Where to the warm and passing southern winds,
Azaleas gently swing their yellow cups.
Soon everywhere, with glory through and through,
The fields will spread with every brilliant hue.
But high o'er all the early floral train,
Where softness all the arching sky resumes.
The dogwood dancing to the winds' refrain.
In stainless glory spreads its snowy blooms.
55
56 George Marion McClellan
A BUTTERFLY IN CHURCH
What dost thou here, thou shining, sinless thing..
With many colored hues and shapely wing?
Why quit the open field and summer air
To flutter here? Thou hast no need of pray«r.
*Tis meet that we, who this great structure built,
Should come to be redeemed and washed from guilt,
For we this gilded edifice within
Are come, with erring hearts and stains of sin.
But thou art free from guilt as God on high;
Go, seek the blooming waste and open sky,
And leave us here our secret woes to bear,
Confessionals and agonies of prayer.
George Marion McClellan 57
THE HILLS OF SEWANEE
Sewanee Hills of dear delight,
Prompting my dreams that used to be,
I know you are waiting me still to-night
By the Unika Range of Tennessee.
The blinking stars in endless space,
The broad moonlight and silvery gleams,
To-night caress your wind-swept face,
And fold you in a thousand dreams.
Your far outlines, less seen than felt.
Which wind with hill propensities,
In moonlight dreams I see you melt
Away in vague immensities.
And, far away, I still can feel
Your mystery that ever speaks
Of vanished things, as shadows steal
Across your breast and rugged peaks.
O, dear blue hills, that lie apart.
And wait so patiently down there.
Your peace takes hold upon my heart
And makes its burden less to bear.
58 George Marion McClellan
THE FEET OF JUDAS
Christ washed the feet of Judas !
The dark and evil passions of his soul,
His secret plot, and sordidness complete,
His hate, his purposing, Christ knew the whole,
And still in love he stooped and washed his feet.
Christ washed the feet of Judas!
Yet all his lurking sin was bare to him,
His bargain with the priest, and more than this,
In Olivet, beneath the moonlight dim,
Aforehand knew and felt his treacherous kiss.
Christ washed the feet of Judas!
And so ineffable his love 'twas meet.
That pity fill his great forgiving heart.
And tenderly to wash the traitor's feet.
Who in his Lord had basely sold his part.
Christ washed the feet of Judas!
And thus a girded servant, self-abased.
Taught that no wrong this side the gate of heaven
Was ever too great to wholly be effaced.
And though unasked, in spirit be forgiven.
And so if we have ever felt the wrong
Of Trampled rights, of caste, it matters not,
What e'er the soul has felt or suffered long,
Oh, heart! this one thing should not be forgot:
Christ washed the feet of Judas.
William Stanley Braithwaite
SANDY STAR AND WILLIE GEE
Sandy Star and Willie Gee,
Count 'em two, you make 'em three:
Pluck the man and boy apart
And you'll see into my heart.
59
6o William Stanley Braithwaite
SANDY STAR
I
Sculptured Worship
The zones of warmth around his heart,
No alien airs had crossed ;
But he awoke one morn to feel
The magic numbness of autumnal frost.
His thoughts were a loose skein of threads,
And tangled emotions, vague and dim;
And sacrificing what he loved
He lost the dearest part of him.
In sculptured worship now he lives,
His one desire a prisoned ache;
If he can never melt again
His very heart will break.
II
Laughing It Out
He had a whim and laughed it out
Upon the exit of a chance;
He floundered in a sea of doubt —
If life was real — or just romance.
Sometimes upon his brow would come
A little pucker of defiance ;
He totalled in a word the sum
Of all man made of facts and science.
William Stanley Braithwaite 6i
And then a hearty laugh would break,
A reassuring shrug of shoulder;
And we would from his fancy take
A faith in death which made life bolder.
Ill
Exit
No, his exit by the gate
Will not leave the wind ajar;
He will go when it is late
With a misty star.
One will call, he cannot see;
One will call, he will not hear;
He will take no company
Nor a hope or fear.
We shall smile who loved him so —
They who gave him hate will weep ;
But for us the winds will blow
Pulsing through his sleep.
IV
The Way
He could not tell the way he came,
Because his chart was lost:
Yet all his way was paved with flame
From the bourne he crossed.
62 William Stanley Braithwaite
He did not know the way to go,
Because he had no map :
He followed where the winds blow, —
And the April sap.
He never knew upon his brow
The secret that he bore, —
And laughs away the mystery now
The dark's at his door.
V
Onus Probandi
No more from out the sunset,
No more across the foam,
No more across the windy hills
Will Sandy Star come home.
He went away to search it
With a curse upon his tongue:
And in his hand the staff of life,
Made music as it swung.
I wonder if he found it,
And knows the mystery now —
Our Sandy Star who went away,
With the secret on his brow.
William Stanley Braithwaite 63
DEL CASCAR
Del Cascar, Del Cascar,
Stood upon a flaming star,
Stood, and let his feet hang down
Till in China the toes turned brown.
And he reached his fingers over
The rim of the sea, like sails from Dover,
And caught a Mandarin at prayer,
And tickled his nose in Orion's hair.
The sun went down through crimson bars,
And left his blind face battered with stars —
But the brown toes in China kept
Hot the tears Del Cascar wept.
64 William Stanley Braithwaite
TURN ME TO MY YELLOW LEAVES
Turn me to my yellow leaves,
I am better satisfied;
There is something in me grieves —
That was never born, and died.
Let me be a scarlet flame
On a windy autumn morn,
I who never had a name,
Nor from breathing image born.
From the margin let me fall
Where the farthest stars sink down.
And the void consumes me, — all
In nothingness to drown.
Let me dream my dream entire.
Withered as an autumn leaf —
Let me have my vain desire.
Vain — as it is brief.
William Stanley Braithwaite 65
IRONIC: LL.D.
There are no hollows any more
Between the mountains; the prairie floor
Is like a curtain with the drape
Of the winds* invisible shape;
And nowhere seen and nowhere heard
The sea's quiet as a sleeping bird.
Now we're traveling, what holds back
Arrival, in the very track
Where the urge put forth ; so we stay
And move a thousand miles a day.
Time's a Fancy ringing bells
Whose meaning, charlatan history, tells!
66 William Stanley Braithwaite
SCINTILLA
I kissed a kiss in youth
Upon a dead man's brow;
And that was long ago, —
And I'm a grown man now.
It's lain there in the dust,
Thirty years and more; —
My lips that set a light
At a dead man's door.
William Stanley Braithwaite 67
SIC VITA
Heart free, hand free,
Blue above, brown under,
All the world to me
Is a place of wonder.
Sun shine, moon shine,
Stars, and winds a-blowing,
All into this heart of mine
Flowing, flowing, flowing!
Mind free, step free,
Days to follow after,
Joys of life sold to me
For the price of laughter.
Girl's love, man's love.
Love of work and duty.
Just a will of God's to prove
Beauty, beauty, beauty!
68 William Stanley Braithwaite
RHAPSODY
I am glad daylong for the gift of song,
For time and change and sorrow;
For the sunset wings and the world-end things
Which hang on the edge of to-morrow.
I am glad for my heart whose gates apart
Are the entrance-place of wonders,
Where dreams come in from the rush and din
Like sheep from the rains and thunders.
George Reginald Margetson
STANZAS FROM
THE FLEDGLING BARD AND THE POETRY
SOCIETY
Part I
Ym out to find the new, the modem school,
Where Science trains the fledgling bard to fly,
Where critics teach the ignorant, the fool,
To write the stuff the editors would buy;
It matters not e'en tho it be a lie, —
Just so it aims to smash tradition's crown
And build up one instead decked with a new renown.
A thought is haunting me by night and day,
And in some safe archive I seek to lay it ;
I have some startling thing I wish to say,
And they can put me wise just how to say it.
Without their aid, I, like the ass, must bray it.
Without due knowledge of its mood and tense,
And so 'tis sure to fail the bard to recompense.
Will some kind one direct me to that college
Where every budding genius now is headed.
The only source to gain poetic knowledge.
Where all the sacred truths lay deep imbedded,
69
70 George Reginald Margetson
Where nothing but the genuine goods are shredded, —
The factory where they shape new feet and meters
That make poetic symbols sound like carpet beaters.
I hope I'll be an eligible student,
E'en tho I am no poet in a sense,
But just a hot-head youth with ways imprudent, —
A rustic ranting rhymer like by chance
Who thinks that he can make the muses dance
By beating on some poet's borrowed lyre,
To win some fool's applause and please his own desire.
Perhaps they'll never know or e'en suspect
That I am not a true, a genuine poet;
If in the poet's colors I am decked
They may not ask me e'er to prove or show it.
I'll play the wise old cock, nor try to crow it,
But be content to gaze with open mind ;
I'll never show the lead but eye things from behind.
Part 11
I have a problem all alone to solve,
A problem how to find the poetry club.
It makes my sky piece like a top revolve,
For fear that they might mark me for a snob.
They'll call me poetry monger and then dub
Me rustic rhymer, anything they choose,
Ay, anything at all, but heaven's immortal muse.
George Reginald Margetson 71
Great Byron, when he published his Childe book,
In which he sang of all his lovely dears,
Called forth hot condemnation and cold look,
From lesser mortals who were not his peers.
They chided him for telling his affairs.
Because they could not tell their own so well.
They plagued the poet lord and made his life a hell.
They called him lewd, vile drunkard, vicious wight,
And all because he dared to tell the truth.
Because he was no cursed hermaphrodite, —
A full fledged genius with the fire of youth.
They hounded him, they hammered him forsooth;
Because he blended human with divine.
They branded him "the bard of women and of wine."
Of course I soak the booze once in a while.
But I don't wake the town to sing and shout it;
I love the girls, they win me with a smile.
But no one knows, for I won't write about it.
And so the fools may never think to doubt it,
When I declare I am a moral man.
As gifted, yet as good as God did ever plan.
Every man has got a hobby.
Every poet has some fault.
Every sweet contains its bitter,
Every fresh thing has its salt.
Every mountain has a valley,
Every valley has a hill.
Every ravine is a river,
Every river is a rill.
72 George Reginald Margetson
Every fool has got some wisdom,
Every wise man is a fool,
Every scholar is a block-head,
Every dunce has been to school.
Every bad man is a good man,
Every fat man is not stout,
Every good man is a bad man
But *tis hard to find him out.
Every strong man is a weak man,
You may doubt it as you please.
Every well man is a sick man.
Every doctor has disease.
James Weldon Johnson
O BLACK AND UNKNOWN BARDS
O black and unknown bards of long ago,
How came your lips to touch the sacred fire?
How, in your darkness, did you come to know
The power and beauty of the minstrel's lyre?
Who first from midst his bonds lifted his eyes?
Who first from out the still watch, lone and long,
Feeling the ancient faith of prophets rise
Within his dark-kept soul, burst into song?
Heart of what slave poured out such melody
As "Steal away to Jesus" ? On its strains
His spirit must have nightly floated free.
Though still about his hands he felt his chains.
Who heard great "Jordan roll"? Whose starward eye
Saw chariot "swing low" ? And who was he
That breathed that comforting, melodic sigh,
"Nobody knows de trouble I see"?
What merely living clod, what captive thing,
Could up toward God through all its darkness grope.
And find within its deadened heart to sing
These songs of sorrow, love and faith, and hope?
How did it catch that subtle undertone.
That note in music heard not with the ears?
73
74 James Weldon Johnson
How sound the elusive reed so seldom blown,
Which stirs the soul or melts the heart to tears.
Not that great German master in his dream
Of harmonies that thundered amongst the stars
At the creation, ever heard a theme
Nobler than "Go down, Moses." Mark its bars
How like a mighty trumpet-call they stir
The blood. Such are the notes that men have sung
Going to valorous deeds ; such tones there were
That helped make history when Time was young.
There is a wide, wide wonder in it all,
That from degraded rest and servile toil
The fiery spirit of the seer should call
These simple children of the sun and soil.
O black slave singers, gone, forgot, unfamed,
You — you alone, of all the long, long line
Of those who've sung untaught, unknown, unnamed,
Have stretched out upward, seeking the divine.
You sang not deeds of heroes or of kings ;
No chant of bloody war, no exulting pean
Of arms-won triumphs ; but your humble strings
You touched in chord with music empyrean.
You sang far better than you knew; the songs
That for your listeners* hungry hearts sufficed
Still live, — ^but more than this to you belongs :
You sang a race from wood and stone to Christ.
James Weldon Johnson 75
SENCE YOU WENT AWAY
Seems lak to me de stars don't shine so bright,
Seems lak to me de sun done loss his light,
Seems lak to me der's nothin' goin' right,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me de sky ain't half so blue.
Seems lak to me dat ev'ything wants you,
Seems lak to me I don't know what to do,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me dat ev'ything is wrong,
Seems lak to me de day's jes twice es long,
Seems lak to me de bird's forgot his song,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me I jes can't he'p but sigh,
Seems lak to me ma th'oat keeps gittin' dry,
Seems lak to me a tear stays in ma eye,
Sence you went away.
76 James Weldon Johnson
THE CREATION
{A Negro Sermon)
And God stepped out on space,
And He looked around and said,
^Tm lonely —
ril make me a world/'
And far as the eye of God could see
Darkness covered everything,
Blacker than a hundred midnights
Down in a cypress swamp.
Then God smiled,
And the light broke,
And the darkness rolled up on one side,
And the light stood shining on the other,
And God said, ''That's good!"
Then God reached out and took the light in His hands,
And God rolled the light around in His hands
Until He made the sun;
And He set that sun a-blazing in the heavens.
And the light that was left from making the sun
God gathered it up in a shining ball
And flung it against the darkness.
Spangling the night with the moon and stars.
Then down between
The darkness and the light
He hurled the world ;
And God said, ''That's goodr
James Weldon Johnson 77
Then God himself stepped down —
And the sun was on His right hand,
And the moon was on His left;
The stars were clustered about His head,
And the earth was under His feet.
And God walked, and where He trod
His footsteps hollowed the valleys out
And bulged the mountains up.
Then He stopped and looked and saw
That the earth was hot and barren.
So God stepped over to the edge of the world
And He spat out the seven seas;
He batted His eyes, and the lightnings flashed ;
He clapped His hands, and the thunders rolled ;
And the waters above the earth came down,
The cooling waters came down.
Then the green grass sprouted.
And the little red flowers blossomed.
The pine tree pointed his finger to the sky,
And the oak spread out his arms.
The lakes cuddled down in the hollows of the ground,
And the rivers ran down to the sea;
And God smiled again,
And the rainbow appeared,
And curled itself around His shoulder.
Then God raised His arm and He waved His Hand
Over the sea and over the land,
And He said, ''Bring forth! Bring forth/'"
And quicker than God could drop His hand.
78 James Weldon Johnson
Fishes and fowls
And beasts and birds
Swam the rivers and the seas,
Roamed the forests and the woods,
And split the air with their wings.
And God said, ''That's good!"
Then God walked around,
And God looked around
On all that He had made.
He looked at His sun,
And He looked at His moon,
And He looked at His little stars;
He looked on His world
With all its living things,
And God said, "Tm lonely still"
Then God sat down
On the side of a hill where He could think;
By a deep, wide river He sat down;
With His head in His hands,
God thought and thought.
Till He thought, "Til make me a man!"
Up from the bed of the river
God scooped the clay;
And by the bank of the river
He kneeled Him down;
And there the great God Almighty
Who lit the sun and fixed it in the sky.
James Weldon Johnson 79
Who flung the stars to the most far corner of the night,
Who rounded the earth in the middle of His hand ;
This Great God,
Like a mammy bending over her baby,
Kneeled down in the dust
Toiling over a lump of clay
Till He shaped it in His own image;
Then into it He blew the breath of life,
And man became a living soul.
Amen. Amen.
8o James Wei don Johnson
THE WHITE WITCH
O brothers mine, take care ! Take care !
The great white witch rides out to-night.
Trust not your prowess nor your strength,
Your only safety lies in flight ;
For in her glance there is a snare,
And in her smile there is a blight.
The great white witch you have not seen?
Then, younger brothers mine, forsooth,
Like nursery children you have looked
For ancient hag and snaggle-tooth ;
But no, not so ; the witch appears
In all the glowing charms of youth.
Her lips are like carnations, red,
Her face like new-born lilies, fair,
Her eyes like ocean waters, blue,
She moves with subtle grace and air,
And all about her head there floats
The golden glory of her hair.
But though she always thus appears
In form of youth and mood of mirth.
Unnumbered centuries are hers,
The infant planets saw her birth;
The child of throbbing Life is she,
Twin sister to the greedy earth.
James Weldon Johnson 8l
And back behind those smiling lips,
And down within those laughing eyes,
And underneath the soft caress
Of hand and voice and purring sighs,
The shadow of the panther lurks,
The spirit of the vampire lies.
For I have seen the great white witch.
And she has led me to her lair,
And I have kissed her red, red lips
And cruel face so white and fair;
Around me she has twined her arms.
And bound me with her yellow hair.
I felt those red lips burn and sear
My body like a living coal ;
Obeyed the power of those eyes
As the needle trembles to the, pole;
And did not care although I felt
The strength go ebbing from my soul.
Oh! she has seen your strong young limbs,
And heard your laughter loud and gay.
And in your voices she has caught
The echo of a far-off day,
When man was closer to the earth ;
And she has marked you for her prey.
She feels the old Antaean strength
In you, the great dynamic beat
Of primal passions, and she sees
In you the last besieged retreat
82 James Weldon Johnson
Of love relentless, lusty, fierce,
Love pain-ecstatic, cruel-sweet.
O, brothers mine, take care ! Take care !
The great white witch rides out to-night.
O, younger brothers mine, beware!
Look not upon her beauty bright ;
For in her glance there is a snare,
And in her smile there is a blight.
James Weldon Johnson 83
MOTHER NIGHT
Eternities before the first-born day,
Or ere the first sun fledged his wings of flame,
Calm Night, the everlasting and the same,
A brooding mother over chaos lay.
And whirling suns shall blaze and then decay.
Shall run their fiery courses and then claim
The haven of the darkness whence they came;
Back to Nirvanic peace shall grope their way.
So when my feeble sun of life burns out.
And sounded is the hour for my long sleep,
I shall, full weary of the feverish light,
Welcome the darkness without fear or doubt,
And heavy-lidded, I shall softly creep
Into the quiet bosom of the Night.
84 James Weldon Johnson
O SOUTHLAND!
O Southland! O Southland!
Have you not heard the call,
The trumpet blown, the word made known
To the nations, one and all ?
The watchword, the hope-word,
Salvation's present plan?
A gospel new, for all — for you :
Man shall be saved by man.
O Southland! O Southland!
Do you not hear to-day
The mighty beat of onward feet.
And know you not their way ?
'Tis forward, 'tis upward.
On to the fair white arch
Of Freedom's dome, and there is room
For each man who would march.
O Southland, fair Southland!
Then why do you still cling
To an idle age and a musty page,
To a dead and useless thing?
*Tis springtime! 'Tis work-time!
The world is young again!
'And God's above, and God is love,
And men are only men.
James Weldon Johnson 85
O Southland! my Southland!
O birthland ! do not shirk
The toilsome task, nor respite ask,
But gird you for the work.
Remember, remember
That weakness stalks in pride ;
That he is strong who helps along
The faint one at his side.
86 James Weldon Johnson
BROTHERS
See ! There he stands ; not brave, but with an air
Of sullen stupor. Mark him well! Is he
Not more like brute than man ? Look in his eye !
No light is there ; none, save the glint that shines
In the now glaring, and now shifting orbs
Of some wild animal caught in the hunter's trap.
How came this beast in human shape and form ?
Speak, man ! — We call you man because you wear
His shape — How are you thus? Are you not from
That docile, child-like, tender-hearted race
Which we have known three centuries? Not from
That more than faithful race which through three wars
Fed our dear wives and nursed our helpless babes
Without a single breach of trust? Speak out!
I am, and am not.
Then who, why are you?
I am a thing not new, I am as old
As human nature. I am that which lurks,
Ready to spring whenever a bar is loosed ;
The ancient trait which fights incessantly
Against restraint, balks at the upward climb;
The weight forever seeking to obey
James Weldon Johnson 87
The law of downward pull; — and I am more:
The bitter fruit am I of planted seed ;
The resultant, the inevitable end
Of evil forces and the powers of wrong.
Lessons in degradation, taught and learned,
The memories of cruel sights and deeds,
The pent-up bitterness, the unspent hate
Filtered through fifteen generations have
Sprung up and found in me sporadic life.
In me the muttered curse of dying men,
On me the stain of conquered women, and
Consuming me the fearful fires of lust,
Lit long ago, by other hands than mine.
In me the down-crushed spirit, the hurled-back prayers
Of wretches now long dead, — their dire bequests, —
In me the echo of the stifled cry
Of children for their bartered mothers' breasts.
I claim no race, no race claims me; I am
No more than human dregs ; degenerate ;
The monstrous offspring of the monster. Sin ;
I am — ^just what I am. . . . The race that fed
Your wives and nursed your babes would do the same
To-day, but I —
Enough, the brute must die!
Quick! Chain him to that oak! It will resist
The fire much longer than this slender pine.
Now bring the fuel! Pile it 'round him! Wait!
Pile not so fast or high ! or we shall lose
The agony and terror in his face.
88 James Weldon Johnson
And now the torch ! Good fuel that ! the flames
Already leap head-high. Hal hear that shriek!
And there's another ! Wilder than the first.
Fetch water ! Water ! Pour a little on
The fire, lest it should burn too fast. Hold so!
Now let it slowly blaze again. See there!
He squirms! He groans! His eyes bulge wildly out,
Searching around in vain appeal for help!
Another shriek, the last ! Watch how the flesh
Grows crisp and hangs till, turned to ash, it sifts
Down through the coils of chain mat hold erect
The ghastly frame against the bark-scorched tree.
Stop ! to each man no more than one man's share.
You take that bone, and you this tooth ; the chain —
Let us divide its links; this skull, of course,
In fair division, to the leader comes.
And now his fiendish crime has been avenged ;
Let us back to our wives and children. — Say,
What did he mean by those last muttered words,
''Brothers in spirit, brothers in deed are we**?
James Weldon Johnson 89
FIFTY YEARS
(1863-1913)
On the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Signing of the
Emancipation Proclamation
O brothers mine, to-day we stand
Where half a century sweeps our ken,
Since God, through Lincoln's ready hand,
Struck off our bonds and made us men.
Just fifty years — a winter's day —
As runs the history of a race;
Yet, as we look back o'er the way,
How distant seems our starting place!
Look farther back! Three centuries!
To where a naked, shivering score.
Snatched from their haunts across the seas,
Stood, wild-eyed, on Virginia's shore.
This land is ours by right of birth.
This land is ours by right of toil ;
We helped to turn its virgin earth.
Our sweat is in its fruitful soil.
Where once the tangled forest stood, —
Where flourished once rank weed and thorn, —
Behold the path-traced, peaceful wood.
The cotton white, the yellow corn.
90 James Weldon Johnson
To gain these fruits that have been earned,
To hold these fields that have been w^on,
Our arms have strained, our backs have burned.
Bent bare beneath a ruthless sun.
That Banner vv^hich is now the type
Of victory on field and flood —
Remember, its first crimson stripe
Was dyed by Attucks' willing blood.
And never yet has come the cry —
When that fair flag has been assailed —
For men to do, for men to die,
That we have faltered or have failed.
We've helped to bear it, rent and torn,
Through many a hot-breath'd battle breeze
Held in our hands, it has been borne
And planted far across the seas.
And never yet, — O haughty Land,
Let us, at least, for this be praised —
Has one black, treason-guided hand
Ever against that flag been raised.
Then should we speak but servile words,
Or shall we hang our heads in shame?
Stand back of new-come foreign hordes,
And fear our heritage to claim?
No! stand erect and without fear,
And for our foes let this suffice —
We've bought a rightful sonship here.
And we have more than paid the price.
James Weldon Johnson 91
And yet, my brothers, well I know
The tethered feet, the pinioned wings,
The spirit bowed beneath the blow,
The heart grown faint from wounds and stings;
The staggering force of brutish might,
That strikes and leaves us stunned and dazed;
The long, vain waiting through the night
To hear some voice for justice raised.
Full well I know the hour when hope
Sinks dead, and 'round us everywhere
Hangs stifling darkness, and we grope
With hands uplifted in despair.
Courage! Look out, beyond, and see
The far horizon's beckoning span!
Faith in your God-known destiny!
We are a part of some great plan.
Because the tongues of Garrison
And Phillips now are cold in death.
Think you their work can be undone ?
Or quenched the fires lit by their breath?
Think you that John Brown's spirit stops?
That Lovejoy was but idly slain?
Or do you think those precious drops
From Lincoln's heart were shed in vain ?
That for which millions prayed and sighed,
That for which tens of thousands fought,
For which so many freely died,
God cannot let it come to naught.
John Wesley Holloway
MISS MELERLEE
Hello dar, Miss Melerlee!
Oh, you're pretty sight to see !
Sof brown cheek, an' smilin' face,
An' willowy form chuck full o' grace —
De sweetes' gal Ah evah see,
An' Ah wush dat you would marry me!
Hello, Miss Melerlee!
Hello dar. Miss Melerlee !
You're de berry gal fo' me !
Pearly teef, an' shinin' hair,
An' silky arm so plump an' bare!
Ah lak yo' walk. Ah lak yo' clothes.
An' de way Ah love you, — goodness knows!
Hello, Miss Melerlee!
Hello dar. Miss Melerlee !
Dat's not yo' name, but it ought to be!
Ah nevah seed yo' face befo'
An' lakly won't again no mo' ;
But yo' sweet smile will follow me
Cla'r into eternity!
Farewell, Miss Melerlee!
93
94 John Wesley Hollo way
CALLING THE DOCTOR
Ah'm sick, doctor-man, Ah'm sick!
Gi' me some'n' to he'p me quick,
Don't,— Ah'U die!
Tried mighty hard fo* to cure mahse'f ;
Tried all dem t'ings on de pantry she'f ;
Couldn' fin' not'in' a-tall would do,
An' so Ah sent fo' you.
"Wha'd Ah take?" Well, le» me see:
Firs', — horhound drops an* catnip tea;
Den rock candy soaked in rum,
An' a good sized chunk o' camphor gum ;
Next Ah tried was castor oil.
An* snakeroot tea brought to a boil ;
Sassafras tea fo' to clean mah blood ;
But none o' dem t'ings didn* do no good.
Den when home remedies seem to shirk,
Dem pantry bottles was put to work:
Blue-mass, laud'num, liver pills,
"Sixty-six, fo* fever an' chills,"
Ready Relief, an* A. B. C,
An' half a bottle of X. Y. Z.
An* sev*al mo* Ah don't recall,
Dey nevah done no good at all.
John Wesley Holloway 95
Mah appetite begun to fail;
!Ah fo'ced some clabber, about a pail,
Fo' mah ol' gran'ma always said
When yo' can't eat you're almost dead.
So Ah got scared an' sent for you. —
Now, doctor, see what you c'n do.
Ah'm sick, doctor-man. Gawd knows Ah'm sick!
Gi' me some'n' to he'p me quick,
Don't,— Ah'll die!
g6 John Wesley Holloway
THE CX)RN SONG
Jes' beyan a clump o' pines, —
Lis'n to 'im now! —
Hyah de jolly black boy,
Singin', at his plow!
In de early momin',
Thoo de hazy air,
Loud an' clear, sweet an' strong
Comes de music rare:
"O mah dovee, Who-ah!
Do you love me ? Who-ah !
Who-ah!"
An' as 'e tu'ns de cotton row,
Hyah 'im tell 'is ol' mule so ;
"Whoa! Har! Come 'ere!"
Don't yo' love a co'n song?
How it stirs yo' blood !
Ever'body list'nin'.
In de neighborhood!
Standin' in yo' front do*
In de misty mo'n,
Hyah de jolly black boy,
Singin' in de co'n :
"O Miss Julie, Who-ah!
Love me truly, Who-ah!
Who-ah!"
John Wesley Holloway 97
Hyah 'im scol' 'is mule so,
Wen 'e try to mek 'Im go :
"Gee! Whoa! Come 'ere!'*
O you jolly black boy,
Yod'lin' in de co'n,
Callin' to yo' dawlin',
In de dewy mo'n,
Love 'er, boy, forevah,
Yodel ever' day;
Only le' me lis'n.
As yo' sing away:
"Omah dawlin'! Who-ah!
Hyah me callin'! Who-ah!
Who-ah!"
Tu'n aroun' anothah row,
Holler to yo' mule so:
"Whoa! Har! Come 'ere!"
98 John Wesley Hollow ay
BLACK MAMMIES
If Ah evah git to glory, an' Ah hope to mek it thoo,
Ah expec* to hyah a story, an' Ah hope you'll hyah it,
too, —
Hit'll kiver Maine to Texas, an* f'om Bosting to
Miami, —
Ov de highes' shaf in glory, 'rected to de Negro Mammy.
You will see a lot o* Washington, an' Washington again ;
An' good ol' Fathah Lincoln, tow'rin' 'hove de rest o'
men;
But dar'll be a bunch o' women standin' hard up by de
th'one,
An' dey'U all be black an' homely, — 'less de Virgin Mary's
one.
Dey will be de talk of angels, dey will be de praise o* men.
An' de whi' folks would go crazy 'thout their Mammy
folks again:
If it's r'ally true dat meekness makes you heir to all de
eart'.
Den our blessed, good ol' Mammies must 'a' been of noble
birt'.
If de greates' is de servant, den Ah got to say o' dem,
Dey'll be standin' nex' to Jesus, sub to no one else but
Him;
If de crown goes to de fait'ful, an* de palm de victors
wear,
Dey'll be loaded down wid jewels more dan anybody dere.
John Wesley Hollo way 99
She'd de hardes' road to trabel evah mortal had to pull;
But she knelt down in huh cabin till huh cup 0' joy was
full;
Dough' oV Satan tried to shake huh f'om huh knees wid
scowl an' frown,
She jes' "dumb up Jacob's ladder," an' he nevah drug
huh down.
She'd jes' croon above de babies, she'd jes' sing when t'ings
went wrong,
An' no matter what de trouble, she would meet it wid a
song;
She jes' prayed huh way to heaben, findin' comfort in de
rod;
She jes' "stole away to Jesus," she jes' sung huh way to
God!
She "kep' lookin' ovah Jurdan," kep' "a-trustin* in de
word,"
Kep' a-lookin' fo "de char'et," kep' "a-waitin' fo' de
Lawd,"
If she evah had to quavah of de shadder of a doubt.
It ain't nevah been discovahed, fo' she nevah sung it out;
But she trusted in de shadder, an' she trusted in de shine.
An' she longed fo' one possession: "dat heaben to be
mine" ;
An' she prayed huh chil'en freedom, but she won huhse'f
de bes', —
Peace on eart' amids' huh sorrows, an' up yonder heabenly
res'!
Leslie Pinckney Hill
TUSKEGEE
Wherefore this busy labor without rest ?
Is it an idle dream to which we cling,
Here where a thousand dusky toilers sing
Unto the world their hope ? "Build we our best.
By hand and thought," they cry, "although unblessed."
So the great engines throb, and anvils ring.
And so the thought is wedded to the thing ;
But what shall be the end, and what the test?
Dear God, we dare not answer, we can see
Not many steps ahead, but this we know —
If all our toilsome building is in vain,
Availing not to set our manhood free.
If envious hate roots out the seed we sow,
The South will wear eternally a stain.
102 Leslie Pinckney Hill
CHRISTMAS AT MELROSE
Come home with me a little space
And browse about our ancient place,
Lay by your wonted troubles here
And have a turn of Christmas cheer.
These sober walls of weathered stone
Can tell a romance of their own,
And these wide rooms of devious line
Are kindly meant in their design.
Sometimes the north wind searches through,
But he shall not be rude to you.
We'll light a log of generous girth
For winter comfort, and the mirth
Of healthy children you shall see
About a sparkling Christmas tree.
Eleanor, leader of the fold,
Hermione with heart of gold,
Elaine with comprehending eyes,
And two more yet of coddling size,
Natalie pondering all that's said.
And Mary with the cherub head —
All these shall give you sweet content
And care-destroying merriment,
While one with true madonna grace
Moves round the glowing fire-place
Where father loves to muse aside
And grandma sits in silent pride.
And you may chafe the wasting oak,
Or freely pass the kindly joke
Leslie Pinckney Hill 103
To mix with nuts and home-made cake
And apples set on coals to bake.
Or some fine carol we will sing
In honor of the Manger-King,
Or hear great Milton's organ verse
Or Plato's dialogue rehearse
What Socrates with his last breath
Sublimely said of life and death.
These dear delights we fain would share
With friend and kinsman everywhere,
And from our door see them depart
Each with a little lighter heart.
I04 Leslie Pinckney Hill
SUMMER MAGIC
So many cares to vex the day,
So many fears to haunt the night,
My heart was all but weaned away
From every lure of old delight.
Then summer came, announced by June,
With beauty, miracle and mirth.
She hung aloft the rounding moon,
She poured her sunshine on the earth,
She drove the sap and broke the bud,
She set the crimson rose afire.
She stirred again my sullen blood,
And waked in me a new desire.
Before my cottage door she spread
The softest carpet nature weaves,
And deftly arched above my head
A canopy of shady leaves.
Her nights were dreams of jeweled skies,
Her days were bowers rife with song.
And many a scheme did she devise
To heal the hurt and soothe the wrong.
For on the hill or in the dell.
Or where the brook went leaping by
Or where the fields would surge and swell
With golden wheat or bearded rye,
I felt her heart against my own,
I breathed the sweetness of her breath.
Till all the cark of time had flown.
And I was lord of life and death.
Leslie Pinckney Hill 105
THE TEACHER
Lord, who am I to teach the way
To little children day by day,
So prone myself to go astray?
I teach them Knowledge, but I know
How faint they flicker and how low
The candles of my knowledge glow.
I teach them Power to will and do.
But only now to learn anew
My own great weakness through and through.
I teach them Love for all mankind
And all God's creatures, but I find
My love comes lagging far behind.
Lord, if their guide I still must be,
Oh let the little children see
The teacher leaning hard on Thee.
Edward Smyth Jones
A SONG OF THANKS
For the sun that shone at the dawn of spring,
For the flowers which bloom and the birds that sing,
For the verdant robe of the gray old earth,
For her coffers filled with their countless worth,
For the flocks which feed on a thousand hills,
For the rippling streams which turn the mills,
For the lowing herds in the lovely vale,
For the songs of gladness on the gale, —
From the Gulf and the Lakes to the Oceans' banks, —
Lord God of Hosts, we give Thee thanks!
For the farmer reaping his whitened fields,
For the bounty which the rich soil yields.
For the cooling dews and refreshing rains,
For the sun which ripens the golden grains.
For the bearded wheat and the fattened swine,
For the stalled ox and the fruitful vine.
For the tubers large and cotton white,
For the kid and the lambkin frisk and blithe.
For the swan which floats near the river-banks,—
Lord God of Hosts, we give Thee thanks!
For the pumpkin sweet and the yellow yam.
For the corn and beans and the sugared ham,
107
lo8 Edward Smyth Jones
For the plum and the peach and the apple red,
For the dear old press where the wine is tread,
For the cock which crows at the breaking dawn,
And the proud old "turk" of the farmer's barn,
For the fish which swim in the babbling brooks,
For the game which hide in the shady nooks, —
From the Gulf and the Lakes to the Oceans' banks —
Lord God of Hosts, we give Thee thanks!
For the sturdy oaks and the stately pines.
For the lead and the coal from the deep, dark mines,
For the silver ores of a thousand fold,
For the diamond bright and the yellow gold,
For the river boat and the flying train.
For the fleecy sail of the rolling main.
For the velvet sponge and the glossy pearl.
For the flag of peace which we now unfurl, —
From the Gulf and the Lakes to the Oceans' banks, —
Lord God of Hosts, we give Thee thanks!
For the lowly cot and the mansion fair,
For the peace and plenty together share,
For the Hand which guides us from above,
For Thy tender mercies, abiding love.
For the blessed home with its children gay.
For returnings of Thanksgiving Day,
For the bearing toils and the sharing cares.
We lift up our hearts in our songs and our prayers, —
From the Gulf and the Lakes to the Oceans' banks, —
Lord God of Hosts, we give Thee thanks!
Ray G. Dandridge
TIME TO DIE
Black brother, think you life so sweet
That you would live at any price?
Does mere existence balance with
The weight of your great sacrifice?
Or can it be you fear the grave
Enough to live and die a slave?
O Brother ! be it better said,
When you are gone and tears are shed,
That your death was the stepping stone
Your children's children cross'd upon.
Men have died that men might live :
Look every foeman in the eye!
If necessary, your life give
For something, ere in vain you die.
109
no Ray G. Dandridge
'ITTLE TOUZLE HEAD
(ToR.V.P.)
Cum, listen w'ile yore Unkel sings
Erbout how low sweet chariot swings,
Truint Angel, wifout wings,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head.
Stop ! Stop ! How dare you laff et me,
Bekaze I foul de time an' key,
Thinks you dat I is Black Pattie,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head?
O, Honey Lam'! dem sparklin' eyes,
Dat offen laffs an' selem cries,
Is sho a God gib natchel prize,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head.
An' doze wee ban's so sof* an' sweet.
Mates wid dem toddlin', velvet feet,
Jes to roun' you out, complete,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head.
Sma't ! youse sma't ez sma*t kin be,
Knows yore evah A, B, C,
Plum on down to X, Y, Z,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head.
Ray G. Dandridge ill
De man doan know how much he miss,
Ef he ain't got no niece lak dis;
Fro yore Unkel one mo' kiss,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head!
I wist sum magic w'u'd ellow,
(By charm or craf — doan mattah how)
You stay jes lak you is right now,
Mah 'ittle Touzle Head.
112 Ray G. Dandridge
ZALKA PEETRUZA
{Who Was Christened Lucy Jane)
She danced, near nude, to tom-tom beat,
With swaying arms and flying feet,
*Mid swirling spangles, gauze and lace.
Her all was dancing — save her face.
A conscience, dumb to brooding fears,
Companioned hearing deaf to cheers;
A body, marshalled by the will.
Kept dancing while a heart stood still:
And eyes obsessed with vacant stare,
Looked over heads to empty air,
As though they sought to find therein
Redemption for a maiden sin.
*Twas thus, amid force driven grace,
We found the lost look on her face;
And then, to us, did it occur
That, though we saw — ^we saw not her.
Ray G. Dandridge 113
SPRIN' FEVAH
Dar's a lazy, sortah hazy
Feelin' grips me, thoo an' thoo;
An' I feels lak doin' less dan enythin*;
Dough de saw is sharp an' greasy,
Dough de task et han' is easy,
An' de day am fair an' breezy,
Dar's a thief dat steals embition in de win*.
Kaint defy it, kaint deny it,
Kaze it jes won't be denied;
Its a mos' pursistin' stubbern sortah thin*;
Anti Tox' doan neutrolize it;
Doctahs fail to analyze it;
So I yiel's (dough I despise it)
To dat res'less, wretchit fevah evah Sprin*.
114 ^^y ^' Dandridge
DE DRUM MAJAH
He*s stnittin' sho ernuff,
Wearin* a lady's muff
En* ways erpon his head,
Red coat ob reddest red,
Purtty white satin ves*,
Gole braid ercross de ches';
Goo'ness! he cuts a stunt,
Prancin* out dar in frunt,
Leadin' his ban*.
Wen dat ah whistle blows,
Each man behine him knows
*Zacklee whut he mus' do;
You bet! he dues it, too.
Wen dat brass stick he twirls,
Ole maids an' lub-sick gurls
Ix)oks on wid longin' eyes,
Dey simpley idolize
Dat han'sum man.
Sweet fife an' piccalo,
Bofe warblin' sof an' lo*,
Slide ho'n an' saxophones.
Jazz syncopated tones,
Snare drum an' lead cornet,
Alto an' clarinet,
Las*, but not least, dar cum
Cymbals an' big bass drum —
0 1 whut a ban* !
Ray G. Dandridge !II5
Cose, we all undahstan*
Each piece he'ps maik de ban*,
But dey all mus* be led,
Sum one mus' be de head:
No doubt, de centipede
Has all de laigs he need,
But take erway de head,
Po' centipede am dead;
So am de ban\
Fenton Johnson
CHILDREN OF THE SUN
We are children of the sun,
Rising sun!
Weaving Southern destiny,
Waiting for the mighty hour
When our Shiloh shall appear
With the flaming sword of right,
With the steel of brotherhood,
And emboss in crimson die
Liberty ! Fraternity !
We are the star-dust folk.
Striving folk!
Sorrow songs have lulled to rest;
Seething passions wrought through wrongs,
Led us where the moon rays dip
In the night of dull despair,
Showed us where the star gleams shine,
And the mystic symbols glow —
Liberty ! Fraternity I
We have come through cloud and mist,
Mighty men !
Dusk has kissed our sleep-bom eyes,
117
Ii8 Fenton Johnson
Reared for us a mystic throne
In the splendor of the skies,
That shall always be for us,
Children of the Nazarene,
Children who shall ever sing
Liberty ! Fraternity !
Fenton Johnson 119
THE NEW DAY
From a vision red with war I awoke and saw the Prince
of Peace hovering over No Man's Land.
Loud the whistles blew and the thunder of cannon was
drowned by the happy shouting of the people.
From the Sinai that faces Armageddon I heard this chant
from the throats of white-robed angels:
Blow your trumpets, little children!
From the East and from the West,
From the cities in the valley,
From God's dwelling on the mountain,
Blow your blast that Peace might know
She is Queen of God's great army.
With the crying blood of millions
We have written deep her name
In the Book of all the Ages;
With the lilies in the valley,
With the roses by the Mersey,
With the golden flower of Jersey
We have crowned her smooth young temples.
Where her footsteps cease to falter
Golden grain will greet the morning,
Where her chariot descends
Shall be broken down the altars
Of the gods of dark disturbance.
Nevermore shall men know suffering,
Nevermore shall women wailing
Shake to grief the God of Heaven.
From the East and from the West,
From the cities in the valley,
I20 Fenton Johnson
From God's dwelling on the mountain,
Little children, blow your trumpets ! '
From Ethiopia, groaning 'neath her heavy burdens, I
heard the music of the old slave songs.
I heard the wail of warriors, dusk brown, who grimly
fought the fight of others in the trenches of Mars.
I heard the plea of blood-stained men of dusk and the
crimson in my veins leapt furiously.
Forget not, O my brothers, how we fought
In No Man's Land that peace might come again!
Forget not, O my brothers, how we gave
Red blood to save the freedom of the world!
We were not free, our tawny hands were tied ;
But Belgium's plight and Serbia's woes we shared
Each rise of sun or setting of the moon.
So when the bugle blast had called us forth
We went not like the surly brute of yore
But, as the Spartan, proud to give the world
The freedom that we never knew nor shared.
These chains, O brothers mine, have weighed us down
As Samson in the temple of the gods;
Unloosen them and let us breathe the air
That makes the goldenrod the flower of Christ.
For we have been with thee in No Man's Land,
Through lake of fire and down to Hell itself ;
And now we ask of thee our liberty.
Our freedom in the land of Stars and Stripes.
I am glad that the Prince of Peace is hovering over No
Man's Land.
Fenton Johnson I2li
TIRED
I am tired of work; I am tired of building up somebody
else's civilization.
Let us take a rest, M'Lissy Jane.
I will go down to the Last Chance Saloon, drink a gallon
or two of gin, shoot a game or two of dice and
sleep the rest of the night on one of Mike's barrels.
You will let the old shanty go to rot, the white people's
clothes turn to dust, and the Calvary Baptist Church
sink to the bottomless pit.
You will spend your days forgetting you married me and
your nights hunting the warm gin Mike serves the
ladies in the rear of the Last Chance Saloon.
Throw the children into the river; civilization has given
us too many. It is better to die than it is to grow
up and find out that you are colored.
Pluck the stars out of the heavens. The stars mark our
destiny. The stars marked my destiny.
I am tired of civilization.
122 Fenton Johnson
THE BANJO PLAYER
There is music in me, the music of a peasant people.
I wander through the levee, picking my banjo and sing-
ing my songs of the cabin and the field. At the
Last Chance Saloon I am as welcome as the violets
in March; there is always food and drink for me
there, and the dimes of those who love honest music.
Behind the railroad tracks the little children clap
their hands and love me as they love Kris Kringle.
But I fear that I am a failure. Last night a woman
called me a troubadour. What is a troubadour?
Fenton Johnson 123
THE SCARLET WOMAN
Once I was good like the Virgin Mary and the Minis-
ter's wife.
My father worked for Mr. Pullman and white people's
tips; but he died two days after his insurance ex-
pired.
I had nothing, so I had to go to work.
All the stock I had was a white girl's education and a
face that enchanted the men of both races.
Starvation danced with me.
So when Big Lizzie, who kept a house for white men,
came to me with tales of fortune that I could reap
from the sale of my virtue I bowed my head to Vice.
Now I can drink more gin than any man for miles
around.
Gin is better than all the water in Lethe.
R. Nathaniel Dett
THE RUBINSTEIN STACCATO ETUDE
S taccato ! Staccato !
Leggier agitato!
In and out does the melody twist —
Unique proposition
Is this composition.
(Alas! for the player who hasn't the wrist!)
Now in the dominant
Theme ringing prominent,
Bass still repeating its one monotone,
Double notes crying.
Up keyboard go flying,
The change to the minor comes in like a groan.
Without a cessation
A chaste modulation
Hastens adown to subdominant key,
Where melody mellow-like
Singing so 'cello-like
Rises and falls in a wild ecstasy.
Scarce is this finished
When chords all diminished
Break loose in a patter that comes down like rain,
A pedal-point wonder
Rivaling thunder.
Now all is mad agitation again.
125
126 R. Nathaniel Dett
Like laughter jolly
Begins the finale;
Again does the *cello its tones seem to lend
Diminuendo ad molto crescendo.
Ah ! Rubinstein only could make such an end !
Georgia Douglas Johnson
THE HEART OF A WOMAN
The heart of a woman goes forth with the dawn,
As a lone bird, soft winging, so restlessly on,
Afar o'er life's turrets and vales does it roam
In the wake of those echoes the heart calls home.
The heart of a woman falls back with the night.
And enters some alien cage in its plight,
And tries to forget it has dreamed of the stars
While it breaks, breaks, breaks on the sheltering bars.
127
128 Georgia Douglas Johnson
YOUTH
The dew is on the grasses, dear,
The blush is on the rose,
And swift across our dial-youth,
A shifting shadow goes.
The primrose moments, lush with bliss,
Exhale and fade away.
Life may renew the Autumn time,
But nevermore the May !
Georgia Douglas Johnson 129
LOST ILLUSIONS
Oh, for the veils of my far away youth,
Shielding my heart from the blaze of the truth,
Why did I stray from their shelter and grow
Into the sadness that follows — to know!
Impotent atom with desolate gaze
Threading the tumult of hazardous ways —
Oh, for the veils, for the veils of my youth
Veils that hung low o'er the blaze of the truth!
130 Georgia Douglas Johnson
I WANT TO DIE WHILE YOU LOVE ME
I want to die while you love me,
While yet you hold me fair,
While laughter lies upon my lips
And lights are in my hair.
I want to die while you love me,
And bear to that still bed,
Your kisses turbulent, unspent
To warm me when I'm dead.
I want to die while you love me
Oh, who would care to live
Till love has nothing more to ask
And nothing more to give!
I want to die while you love me
And never, never see
The glory of this perfect day
Grow dim or cease to be.
Georgia Douglas Johnson I131
WELT
Would I might mend the fabric of my youth
That daily flaunts its tatters to my eyes,
Would I might compromise awhile with truth
Until our moon now waxing, wanes and dies.
For I would go a further while with you,
And drain this cup so tantalant and fair
Which meets my parched lips like cooling dew.
Ere time has brushed cold fingers thru my hair!
132 Georgia Douglas Johnson
MY LITTLE DREAMS
I'm folding up my little dreams
Within my heart to-night,
And praying I may soon forget
The torture of their sight.
For Time's deft fingers scroll my brow.
With fell relentless art —
I'm folding up my little dreams
To-night, within my heart!
Claude McKay
THE LYNCHING
His spirit in smoke ascended to high heaven.
His father, by the crudest way of pain,
Had bidden him to his bosom once again ;
The awful sin remained still unforgiven.
All night a bright and solitary star
( Perchance the one that ever guided him,
Yet gave him up at last to Fate's wild whim)
Hung pitifully o'er the swinging char.
Day dawned, and soon the mixed crowds came to view
The ghastly body swaying in the sun:
The women thronged to look, but never a one
Showed sorrow in her eyes of steely blue;
And little lads, lynchers that were to be.
Danced round the dreadful thing in fiendish glee.
133
134 Claude McKay
IF WE MUST DIE
If we must die — let it not be, like hogs
Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot,
While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs,
Making their mock at our accursed lot.
If we must die — oh, let us nobly die,
So that our precious blood may not be shed
In vain; then even the monsters we defy
Shall be constrained to honor us though dead!
Oh, Kinsmen! We must meet the common foe;
Though far outnumbered, let us still be brave,
And for their thousand blows deal one death-blow!
What though before us lies the open grave ?
Like men we'll face the murderous, cowardly pack,
Pressed to the wall, dying, but — fighting back!
Claude McKay 135
TO THE WHITE FIENDS
Think you I am not fiend and savage too?
Think you I could not arm me with a gun
And shoot down ten of you for every one
Of my black brothers murdered, burnt by you?
Be not deceived, for every deed you do
I could match — out-match : am I not Africa's son.
Black of that black land where black deeds are done?
But the Almighty from the darkness drew
My soul and said : Even thou shalt be a light
Awhile to burn on the benighted earth,
Thy dusky face I set among the white
For thee to prove thyself of highest worth;
Before the world is swallowed up in night,
To show thy little lamp: go forth, go forth!
136 Claude McKay
THE HARLEM DANCER
Applauding youths laughed with young prostitutes
And watched her perfect, half-clothed body sway;
Her voice was like the sound of blended flutes
Blown by black players upon a picnic day.
She sang and danced on gracefully and calm,
The light gauze hanging loose about her form;
To me she seemed a proudly-swaying palm
Grown lovelier for passing through a storm.
Upon her swarthy neck black, shiny curls
Profusely fell; and, tossing coins in praise.
The wine-flushed, bold-eyed boys, and even the girls,
Devoured her with their eager, passionate gaze;
But, looking at her falsely-smiling face
I knew her self was not in that strange place.
Claude McKay 127
HARLEM SHADOWS
I hear the halting footsteps of a lass
In Negro Harlem when the night lets fall
Its veil. I see the shapes of girls who pass
Eager to heed desire's insistent call:
Ah, little dark girls, who in slippered feet
Go prowling through the night from street to street.
Through the long night until the silver break
Of day the little gray feet know no rest,
Through the lone night until the last snow-flake
Has dropped from heaven upon the earth's white breast,
The dusky, half-clad girls of tired feet
Are trudging, thinly shod, from street to street.
Ah, stern harsh world, that in the wretched way
Of poverty, dishonor and disgrace.
Has pushed the timid little feet of clay.
The sacred brown feet of my fallen race !
Ah, heart of me, the weary, weary feet
In Harlem wandering from street to street.
138 Claude McKay
AFTER THE WINTER
Some day, when trees have shed their leaves,
And against the morning's white
The shivering birds beneath the eaves
Have sheltered for the night,
We'll turn our faces southward, love,
Toward the summer isle
Where bamboos spire the shafted grove
And wide-mouthed orchids smile.
And we will seek the quiet hill
Where towers the cotton tree,
And leaps the laughing crystal rill.
And works the droning bee.
And we will build a lonely nest
Beside an open glade,
And there forever will we rest,
O love — O nut-brown maid!
Claude McKay 139
SPRING IN NEW HAMPSHIRE
Too green the springing April grass,
Too blue the silver speckled sky,
For me to linger here, alas,
While happy winds go laughing by.
Wasting the golden hours indoors.
Washing windows and scrubbing floors.
Too wonderful the April night.
Too faintly sweet the first May flowers,
The stars too gloriously bright,
For me to spend the evening hours,
When fields are fresh and streams are leaping,
Wearied, exhausted, dully sleeping.
140 Claude McKay
THE TIRED WORKER
O whisper, O my soul! — the afternoon
Is waning into evening — whisper soft!
Peace, O my rebel heart! for soon the moon
From out its misty veil will swing aloft!
Be patient, weary body, soon the night
Will wrap thee gently in her sable sheet,
And with a leaden sigh thou wilt invite
To rest thy tired hands and aching feet.
The wretched day was theirs, the night is mine;
Come, tender sleep, and fold me to thy breast.
But what steals out the gray clouds red like wine?
O dawn! O dreaded dawn! O let me rest!
Weary my veins, my brain, my life, — have pity!
No ! Once again the hard, the ugly city.
Claude McKay 141
THE BARRIER
I must not gaze at them although
Your eyes are dawning day ;
I must not watch you as you go
Your sun-illumined way;
I hear but I must never heed
The fascinating note,
Which, fluting like a river-reed,
Comes from your trembling throat ;
I must not see upon your face
Love's softly glowing spark;
For there's the barrier of race,
You're fair and I am dark.
142 Claude McKay
TO O. E. A.
Your voice is the color of a robin's breast,
And there's a sweet sob in it like rain — still rain in the
night.
Among the leaves of the trumpet-tree, close to his nest,
The pea-dove sings, and each note thrills me with
strange delight
Like the words, wet with music, that well from your
trembling throat.
I'm afraid of your eyes, they're so bold.
Searching me through, reading my thoughts, shining
like gold.
But sometimes they are gentle and soft like the dew on
the lips of the eucharis
Before the sun comes warm with his lover's kiss,
You are sea-foam, pure with the star's loveliness,
Not mortal, a flower, a fairy, too fair for the beauty-
shorn earth.
All wonderful things, all beautiful things, gave of theii
wealth to your birth :
O I love you so much, not recking of passion, that I
feel it is wrong.
But men will love you, flower, fairy, non-mortal
spirit burdened with flesh,
Forever, life-long.
Claude McKay 143
FLAME-HEART
So much have I forgotten in ten years,
So much in ten brief years; I have forgot
What time the purple apples come to juice
And what month brings the shy forget-me-not;
Forgotten is the special, startling season
Of some beloved tree's flowering and fruiting.
What time of year the ground doves brown the fields
And fill the noonday with their curious fluting:
I have forgotten much, but still remember
The poinsettia's red, blood-red in warm December.
I still recall the honey-fever grass.
But I cannot bring back to mind just when
We rooted them out of the ping-wing path
To stop the mad bees in the rabbit pen.
I often try to think in what sweet month
The languid painted ladies used to dapple
The yellow bye road mazing from the main,
Sweet with the golden threads of the rose-apple:
I have forgotten, strange, but quite remember
The poinsettia's red, blood-red in warm December.
What weeks, what months, what time o' the mild year
We cheated school to have our fling at tops?
What days our wine-thrilled bodies pulsed with joy
Feasting upon blackberries in the copse?
144 Claude McKay
Oh, some I know! I have embalmed the days,
Even the sacred moments, when we played,
All innocent of passion uncorrupt,
At noon and evening in the flame-heart's shade;
We were so happy, happy, — I remember
Beneath the poinsettia's red in warm December.
Claude McKay 145
TWO-AN'-SIX
Merry voices chatterin',
Nimble feet dem patterin*,
Big an' little, faces gay,
Happy day dis market day.
Sateday, de marnin' break,
Soon, soon market-people wake;
An' de light shine from de moon
While dem boy, wid pantaloon
Roll up ober dem knee-pan,
'Tep across de buccra Ian'
To de pastur whe' de harse
Feed along wid de jackass.
An' de mule cant' in de track
Wid him tail up in him back,
All de ketchin' to defy,
No ca' how dem boy might try.
In de early mamin'-tide.
When de cocks crow on de hill
An' de stars are shinin' still,
Mirrie by de fireside
Hots de coffee for de lads
Comin* ridin' on de pads
T'rown across dem animul —
Donkey, harse too, an' de mule,
Which at last had come do'n cool.
On de bit dem hoi' dem full :
146 Claude McKay
Racin' ober pastur' Ian',
See dem comin' ebery man,
Comin' fe de steamin' tea
Ober hilly track an' lea.
Hard-wuk'd donkey on de road
Trottin' wid him ushal load,
Hamper pack' wi' yam an' grain,
Sour-sop, and Gub'nor cane.
Cous' Sun sits in hired dray,
Drivin' 'long de market way ;
Whole week grindin' sugar cane
T'rough de boilin' sun an' rain.
Now, a'ter de toilin' hard.
He goes seekin* his reward.
While he's thinkin' in him min*
Of de dear ones lef behin',
Of de loved though ailin' wife,
Darlin' treasure of his life.
An' de picknies, six in all.
Whose 'nuff burdens 'pon him fall
Seben lovin' ones in need,
Seben hungry mouths fe feed ;
On deir wants he thinks alone,
Neber dreamin' of his own.
But gwin' on wid joyful face
Till him re'ch de market-place.
Sugar bears no price to-day,
Though it is de mont' o' May,
Claude McKay 147
When de time Is hellish hot,
An' de water cocoanut
An' de cane bebridge is nice,
Mix' up wid a lilly ice.
Big an' little, great an' small,
Af ou yam is all de call ;
Sugar tup an' gill a quart,
Yet de people hab de heart
Wantin' brater top o' i'.
Want de sweatin' higgler fe
Ram de pan an' pile i' up.
Yet sell i' fe so-so tup.
Cousin Sun is lookin' sad.
As de market is so bad ;
Ton him han' him res' him chin.
Quietly sit do'n thinkin'
Of de loved wife sick in bed,
An' de children to be fed —
What de laborers would say
When dem know him couldn' pay;
Also what about de mill
Whe' him hire from ole Bill;
So him think, an' think on so.
Till him t'oughts no more could go.
Then he got up an' began
Pickin' up him sugar-pan :
In his ears rang t'rough de din
"Only two-an'-six a tin'."
What a tale he'd got to tell.
How bad, bad de sugar sell !
148 Claude McKay
Tekin' out de lee amount,
Him set do'n an' begin count
All de time him min' deh doubt
How expenses would pay out;
Ah, it gnawed him like de ticks,
Sugar sell fe two-an'-six!
So he journeys on de way,
Feelin' sad dis market day;
No e'en buy a little cake
To gi'e baby when she wake, —
Passin' 'long de candy-shop
'Douten eben mek a stop
To buy drops fe las'y son.
For de lilly cash nea' done.
So him re'ch him own a groun',
An' de children scamper roun',
Each one stretchin' out him han*,
Lookin' to de poor sad man.
Oh, how much he felt de blow.
As he watched dem face fall low,
When dem wait an' nuttin' came
An' drew back deir ban's wid shame!
But de sick wife kissed his brow:
"Sun, don't get down-hearted now;
Ef we only pay expense
We mus' wuk we common-sense,
Cut an' carve, an' carve an' cut,
Mek gill sarbe fe quattiewut;
Claude McKay 149
We mus* try mek two ends meet
Neber mind how hard be it.
We won't mind de haul an' pull,
While dem pickny belly full."
An' de shadow lef him face,
An' him felt an inward peace.
As he blessed his better part
For her sweet an' gentle heart :
"Dear one o' my heart, my breat',
Won't I lub you to de deat'?
When my heart is weak an' sad,
Who but you can mek it glad?"
So dey kissed an' kissed again,
An' deir t'oughts were not on pain,
But was 'way down in de sout'
Where dey'd wedded in deir yout',
In de marnin' of deir life
Free from all de grief an' strife,
Happy in de marnin' light.
Never thinkin' of de night.
So dey k'lated eberyt'ing;
An' de profit it could bring,
A'ter all de business fix'.
Was a princely two-an'-six.
Joseph S. Cotter, Jr.
A PRAYER
As I lie in bed,
Flat on my back ;
There passes across my ceiling
An endless panorama of things —
Quick steps of gay-voiced children,
Adolescence in its wondering silences.
Maid and man on moonlit summer's eve,
Women in the holy glow of Motherhood,
Old men gazing silently thru the twilight
Into the beyond.
O God, give me words to make my dream-children live.
151
152 Joseph S. Cotter, Jr.
AND WHAT SHALL YOU SAY?
Brother, come!
And let us go unto our God.
And when we stand before Him
I shall say —
"Lord, I do not hate,
I am hated.
I scourge no one,
I am scourged.
I covet no lands.
My lands are coveted.
I mock no peoples.
My people are mocked."
And, brother, what shall you say?
Joseph S. Cotter, Jr, 153
IS IT BECAUSE I AM BLACK?
Why do men smile when I speak,
And call my speech
The whimperings of a babe
That cries but knows not what it wants?
Is it because I am black?
Why do men sneer when I arise
And stand in their councils,
And look them eye to eye.
And speak their tongue?
Is it because I am black?
154 Joseph S. Cotter, Jr.
THE BAND OF GIDEON
The band of Gideon roam the sky,
The howling wind is their war-cry,
The thunder's roll is their trump's peal,
And the lightning's flash their vengeful steel.
Each black cloud
Is a fiery steed.
And they cry aloud
With each strong deed,
"The sword of the Lord and Gideon."
And men below rear temples high
And mock their God with reasons why,
And live in arrogance, sin and shame,
And rape their souls for the world's good name.
Each black cloud
Is a fiery steed.
And they cry aloud
With each strong deed,
"The sword of the Lord and Gideon.'*
The band of Gideon roam the sky
And view the earth with baleful eye;
In holy wrath they scourge the land
With earth-quake, storm and burning brand.
Each black cloud
Is a fiery steed.
And they cry aloud
With each strong deed,
"The sword of the Lord and Gideon."
Joseph S. Cotter, Jr. 155
The lightnings flash and the thunders roll,
And "Lord have mercy on my soul,"
Cry men as they fall on the stricken sod,
In agony searching for their God.
Each black cloud
Is a fiery steed.
And they cry aloud
With each strong deed,
"The sword of the Lord and Gideon."
And men repent and then forget
That heavenly w^rath they ever met,
The band of Gideon yet will come
And strike their tongues of blasphemy dumb.
Each black cloud
Is a fiery steed.
And they cry aloud
With each strong deed,
"The sword of the Lord and Gideon."
156 Joseph S. Cotter, Jr.
RAIN MUSIC
On the dusty earth-drum
Beats the falling rain;
Now a whispered murmur,
Now a louder strain.
Slender, silvery drumsticks.
On an ancient drum,
Beat the mellow music
Bidding life to come.
Chords of earth awakened,
Notes of greening spring,
Rise and fall triumphant
Over every thing.
Slender, silvery drumsticks
Beat the long tattoo —
God, the Great Musician,
Calling life anew.
Joseph S. Cotter, Jr. 157
SUPPLICATION
I am so tired and weary,
So tired of the endless fight,
So weary of waiting the dawn
And finding endless night.
That I ask but rest and quiet —
Rest for days that are gone.
And quiet for the little space
That I must journey on.
Roscoe C. Jamison
THE NEGRO SOLDIERS
These truly are the Brave,
These men who cast aside
Old memories, to walk the blood-stained pave
Of Sacrifice, joining the solemn tide
That moves away, to suffer and to die
For Freedom — when their own is yet denied !
O Pride! O Prejudice! When they pass by,
Hail them, the Brave, for you now crucified!
These truly are the Free,
These souls that grandly rise
Above base dreams of vengeance for their wrongs,
Who march to war with visions in their eyes
Of Peace through Brotherhood, lifting glad songs,
Aforetime, while they front the firing line.
Stand and behold ! They take the field to-day,
Shedding their blood like Him now held divine,
'Kiat those who mock might find a better way!
«S9
Jessie Fauset
LA VIE C'EST LA VIE
On summer afternoons I sit
Quiescent by you in the park,
And idly watch the sunbeams gild
And tint the ash-trees* bark.
Or else I watch the squirrels frisk
And chafFer in the grassy lane;
And all the while I mark your voice
Breaking with love and pain.
I know a woman who would give
Her chance of heaven to take my place;
To see the love-light in your eyes,
The love-glow on your face !
And there's a man whose lightest word
Can set my chilly blood afire;
Fulfilment of his least behest
Defines my life's desire.
But he will none of me. Nor I
Of you. Nor you of her. 'Tis said
The world is full of jests like these.—
I wish that I were dead.
x6i
1 62 Jessie Fauset
CHRISTMAS EVE IN FRANCE
Oh little Christ, why do you sigh
As you look down to-night
On breathless France, on bleeding France,
And all her dreadful plight?
What bows your childish head so low?
What turns your cheek so white ?
Oh little Christ, why do you moan,
• What is it that you see
In mourning France, in martyred France,
And her great agony?
Does she recall your own dark day,
Your own Gethsemane?
Oh little Christ, why do you weep.
Why flow your tears so sore
For pleading France, for praying France,
A suppliant at God's door?
"God sweetened not my cup," you say,
"Shall He for France do more?"
Oh little Christ, what can this mean,
Why must this horror be
For fainting France, for faithful France,
And her sweet chivalry?
**I bled to free all men," you say
"France bleeds to keep men free."
Jessie Fauset 163
Oh little, lovely Christ — you smile!
What guerdon is in store
For gallant France, for glorious France,
And all her valiant corps ?
"Behold I live, and France, like me.
Shall live for evermore."
164 Jessie Fauset
DEAD FIRES
If this is peace, this dead and leaden thing,
Then better far the hateful fret, the sting.
Better the wound forever seeking balm
Than this gray calm !
Is this pain's surcease ? Better far the ache,
The long-drawn dreary day, the night's white wake,
Better the choking sigh, the sobbing breath
Than passion's death!
Jessie Fauset 165
ORIFLAMME
"I can remember when I was a little, young girl, how my old
mammy would sit out of doors in the evenings and look up at
the stars and groan, and I would say, 'Mammy, what makes
you groan so?' And she would say, *I am groaning to think
of my poor children; they do not know where I be and I don't
know where they be. I look up at the stars and they look up
at the stars ! ' " — Sojourner Truth.
I think I see her sitting bowed and black,
Stricken and seared with slavery's mortal scars,
Reft of her children, lonely, anguished, yet
Still looking at the stars.
Symbolic mother, we thy myriad sons.
Pounding our stubborn hearts on Freedom's bars,
Clutching our birthright, fight with faces set,
Still visioning the stars!
1 66 Jessie Fauset
OBLIVION
From the French of Massillon Coicou {Haiti)
I hope when I am dead that I shall lie
In some deserted grave — I cannot tell you why,
But I should like to sleep in some neglected spot
Unknown to every one, by every one forgot.
There lying I should taste with my dead breath
The utter lack of life, the fullest sense of death ;
And I should never hear the note of jealousy or hate,
The tribute paid by passersby to tombs of state.
To me would never penetrate the prayers and tears
That futilely bring torture to dead and dying ears;
There I should lie annihilate and my dead heart would
bless
Oblivion — the shroud and envelope of happiness.
Anne Spencer
BEFORE THE FEAST OF SHUSHAN
Garden of Shushan!
After Eden, all terrace, pool, and flower recollect thee:
Ye weavers in saffron and haze and Tyrlan purple,
Tell yet what range in color wakes the eye ;
Sorcerer, release the dreams born here when
Drowsy, shifting palm-shade enspells the brain;
And sound! ye with harp and flute ne'er essay
Before these star-noted birds escaped from paradise awhile
to
Stir all dark, and dear, and passionate desire, till mine
Arms go out to be mocked by the softly kissing body of
the wind —
Slave, send Vashti to her King!
The fiery wattles of the sun startle into flame
The marbled towers of Shushan :
So at each day's wane, two peers — the one in
Heaven, the other on earth — welcome with their
Splendor the peerless beauty of the Queen.
Cushioned at the Queen's feet and upon her knee
Finding glory for mine head, — still, nearly shamed
Am I, the King, to bend and kiss with sharp
Breath the olive-pink of sandaled toes between;
167
i68 Anne Spencer
Or lift me high to the magnet of a gaze, dusky,
Like the pool when but the moon-ray strikes to its depth;
Or closer press to crush a grape 'gainst lips redder
Than the grape, a rose in the night of her hair;
Then — Sharon's Rose in my arms.
And I am hard to force the petals wide;
And you are fast to suffer and be sad.
Is any prophet come to teach a new thing
Now in a more apt time?
Have him 'maze how you say love is sacrament;
How says Vashti, love is both bread and wine ;
How to the altar may not come to break and drink,
Hulky flesh nor fleshly spirit!
I, thy lord, like not manna for meat as a Judahn ;
I, thy master, drink, and red wine, plenty, and when
I thirst. Eat meat, and full, when I hunger.
I, thy King, teach you and leave you, when I list.
No woman in all Persia sets out strange action
To confuse Persia's lord —
Love is but desire and thy purpose fulfillment;
I, thy King, so say !
Anne Spencer 169
AT THE CARNIVAL
Gay little Girl-of-the-DivIng-Tank,
I desire a name for you,
Nice, as a right glove fits;
For you — who amid the malodorous
Mechanics of this unlovely thing,
Are darling of spirit and form.
I know you — a glance, and what you are
Sits-by-the-fire in my heart.
My Limousine-Lady knows you, or
Why does the slant-envy of her eye mark
Your straight air and radiant inclusive smile?
Guilt pins a fig-leaf ; Innocence is its own adorning.
The bull-necked man knows you — this first time
His itching flesh sees form divine and vibrant health
And thinks not of his avocation.
I came incuriously —
Set on no diversion save that my mind
Might safely nurse its brood of misdeeds
In the presence of a blind crowd.
The color of life was gray.
Everywhere the setting seemed right
For my mood.
Here the sausage and garlic booth
Sent unholy incense skyward;
There a quivering female-thing
Gestured assignations, and lied
To call it dancing;
lyo Anne Spencer
There, too, were games of chance
With chances for none ;
But oh ! Girl-of-the-Tank, at last !
Gleaming Girl, how intimately pure and free
The gaze you send the crowd,
As though you know the dearth of beauty
In its sordid life.
We need you — my Limousine-Lady,
The bull-necked man and I.
Seeing you here brave and water-clean,
Leaven for the heavy ones of earth,
I am swift to feel that what makes
The plodder glad is good ; and
Whatever is good is God.
The wonder is that you are here ;
I have seen the queer in queer places,
But never before a heaven-fed
Naiad of the Carnival-Tank!
Little Diver, Destiny for you.
Like as for me, is shod in silence;
Years may seep into your soul
The bacilli of the usual and the expedient;
I implore Neptune to claim his child to-day I
Anne Spencer i^ji
THE WIFE-WOMAN
Maker-of-Sevens in the scheme of things
From earth to star ;
Thy cycle holds whatever is fate, and
Over the border the bar.
Though rank and fierce the mariner
Sailing the seven seas,
He prays, as he holds his glass to his eyes,
Coaxing the Pleiades.
I cannot love them ; and I feel your glad
Chiding from the grave,
That my all vi^as only worth at all, what
Joy to you it gave.
These seven links the Law compelled
For the human chain —
I cannot love them; and yoUj oh.
Seven-fold months in Flanders slain !
A jungle there, a cave here, bred six
And a million years,
Sure and strong, mate for mate, such
Love as culture fears ;
I gave you clear the oil and wine;
You saved me your hob and hearth —
See how even life may be ere the
Sickle comes and leaves a swath.
172 Anne Spencer
But I can wait the seven of moons,
Or years I spare,
Hoarding the heart's plenty, nor spend
A drop, nor share —
So long but outlives a smile and
'A silken gown ;
Then gaily I reach up from my shroud,
And you, glory-clad, reach down.
Anne Spencer 173
TRANSLATION
We trekked into a far country,
My friend and I.
Our deeper content was never spoken,
But each knew all the other said.
He told me how calm his soul was laid
By the lack of anvil and strife.
"The wooing kestrel," I said, "mutes his mating-note
To please the harmony of this sweet silence."
And when at the day's end
We laid tired bodies 'gainst
The loose warm sands,
And the air fleeced its particles for a coverlet;
When star after star came out
To guard their lovers in oblivion —
My soul so leapt that my evening prayer
Stole my morning song!
174 Anne Spencer
DUNBAR
Ah, how poets sing and die !
Make one song and Heaven takes it;
Have one heart and Beauty breaks it;
Chatterton, Shelley, Keats and I —
Ah, how poets sing and die!
Alex Rogers
WHY ADAM SINNED
"I heeard da ole folks talkin' in our house da other night
*Bout Adam in da scripchuh long ago.
Da lady folks all 'bused him, sed, he knowed ft wus'n right
An' 'cose da men folks dey all sed, "Dat's so."
I felt sorry fuh Mistuh Adam, an' I felt like puttin' in,
'Cause I knows mo' dan dey do, all 'bout whut made
Adam sin:
Adam nevuh had no Mammy, fuh to take him on her
knee
An' teach him right fum wrong an' show him
Things he ought to see.
I knows down in my heart — he'd-a let dat apple be
But Adam nevuh had no dear old Ma-am-my.
He nevuh knowed no chilehood roun* da ole log cabin do*,
He nevuh knowed no pickaninny life.
He started in a great big grown up man, an' whut is mo',
He nevuh had da right kind uf a wife.
Jes s'pose he'd had a Mammy when dat temptin' did begin
An' she'd a come an' tole him
"Son, don' eat dat — dat's a sin."
175
176 Alex Rogers
But, Adam nevuh had no Mammy fuh to take him on her
knee
An* teach him right fum wrong an* show him
Things he ought to see.
I knows down in my heart he'd a let dat apple be,
But Adam nevuh had no dear old Ma-am-my.
Alex Rogers 177
THE RAIN SONG
Bro. Simmons
"Walk right in Brother Wilson — ^how you feelin* to-
day?"
Bro, Wilson.
"Jes Mod'rate, Brother Simmons, but den I ginnerly feels
dat way.'*
Bro. Simmons
"Here's White an' Black an' Brown an' Green; how's
all you gent'men's been?"
Bro. White
"My health is good but my bus'ness slack."
Bro. Black
"I'se been sufE'rin' lots wid pains in my back."
Bro. Brown
"My ole 'ooman's sick, but I'se alright — "
Bro. Green
"Yes, I went aftuh Doctuh fuh her 'tuther night—"
Bro. Simmons
"Here's Sandy Turner, as I live!"
178 Alex Rogers
Bro. Turner
"Yes, I didn' *spect to git here — but here I is!"
Bro. Simmons
"Now, gent'mens, make yo'selves to home,
Dare's nothin' to fear — my ole 'ooman's gone —
My stars; da weather's pow'ful warm —
I wouldn' be s'prised ef we had a storm."
Bro. Brown
"No, Brother Simmons, we kin safely say —
'Tain't gwine to be no storm to-day
Kase here am facts dat's mighty plain
An' any time you sees 'em you kin look f uh rain :
Any time you hears da cheers an' tables crack
An' da folks wid rheumatics — dare jints is on da rack — "
All
"Lookout fuh rain, rain, rain.
"When da ducks quack loud an' da peacocks cry,
An' da far off hills seems to be right nigh.
Prepare fuh rain, rain, rain!
"When da ole cat on da hearth wid her velvet paws
'Gins to wipin' over her whiskered jaws,
Sho' sign o' rain, rain, rain!
"When da frog's done changed his yaller vest,
An' in his brown suit he is dressed.
Mo* rain, an' still mo' rain !
Alex Rogers 179
"When you notice da air it Stan's stock still,
An' da blackbird's voice it gits so awful shrill,
Dat am da time fuh rain.
"When yo' dog quits bones an' begins to fas'.
An' when you see him eatin'; he's eatin' grass:
Shoes', trues', cert'nes sign ob rain!"
Refrain
"No, Brother Simmons, we kin safely say,
'Tain't gwine tuh be no rain to-day,
Kase da sut ain't fallin' an' da dogs ain't sleep.
An' you ain't seen no spiders f um dare cobwebs creep ;
Las' night da sun went bright to bed,
An' da moon ain't nevah once been seen to hang her
head ;
If you'se watched all dis, den you kin safely say,
Dat dare ain't a-gwine to be no rain to-day."
Waverley Turner Carmichael
KEEP ME, JESUS, KEEP ME
Keep me 'neath Thy mighty wing,
Keep me, Jesus, keep me;
Help me praise Thy Holy name,
Keep me, Jesus, keep me.
O my Lamb, come, my Lamb,
O my good Lamb,
Save me, Jesus, save me.
Hear me as I cry to Thee;
Keep me, Jesus, keep me;
May I that bright glory see;
Keep me, Jesus, keep me.
O my Lamb, my good Lamb,
O my good Lamb,
Keep me, Jesus, keep me.
i8z
1 82 Waverley Turner Carmichael
WINTER IS COMING
De winter days are drawin' nigh
An* by the fire I sets an' sigh ;
De nothe'n win' is blowin' cold,
Like it done in days of old.
De yaller leafs are fallin' fas',
Fur summer days is been an' pas' ;
The air is blowin' mighty cold,
Like it done in days of old.
De frost is fallin' on de gras'
An' seem to say "Dis is yo' las' " —
De air is blowin' mighty cold
Like it done in days of old.
Alice Dunbar-Nelson
SONNET
I had no thought of violets of late,
The wild, shy kind that spring beneath your feet
In wistful April days, when lovers mate
And wander through the fields in raptures sweet.
The thought of violets meant florists' shops.
And bows and pins, and perfumed papers fine;
And garish lights, and mincing little fops
And cabarets and songs, and deadening wine.
So far from sweet real things my thoughts had strayed,
I had forgot wide fields, and clear brown streams;
The perfect loveliness that God has made, —
Wild violets shy and Heaven-mounting dreams.
And now — unwittingly, you've made me dream
Of violets, and my soul's forgotten gleam.
X83
Charles Bertram Johnson
A LITTLE CABIN
Des a little cabin
Big ernuff fur two.
Des awaitin', honey,
Cozy fixt fur you ;
Down dah by de road,
Not ve'y far from town,
Waitin' fur de missis,
When she's ready to come down,
Des a little cabin.
An* er acre o' groun*,
Vines agrowin* on it.
Fruit trees all aroun*,
Hollyhawks a-bloomin'
In de gyahden plot —
Honey, would you like to
Own dat little spot?
Make dat little cabin
Cheery, clean an' bright,
With an' angel in it
Like a ray of light?
Make dat little palace
Somethin' fine an' gran',
Make it like an Eden,
Fur a lonely man?
185
1 86 Charles Bertram Johnson
Des you listen, Honey,
While I 'splain it all,
How some lady's go'nter
Boss dat little hall;
Des you take my han*
Dat's de way it's writ,
Des you take my heart,
Dat's de deed to it.
Charles Bertram Johnson 187
NEGRO POETS
Full many lift and sing
Their sweet imagining;
Not yet the Lyric Seer,
The one bard of the throng,
With highest gift of song,
Breaks on our sentient ear.
Not yet the gifted child,
With notes enraptured, wild,
That storm and throng the heart,
To make his rage our own.
Our hearts his lyric throne ;
Hard won by cosmic art.
I hear the sad refrain.
Of slavery's sorrow-strain;
The broken half-lispt speech
Of freedom's twilit hour;
The greater growing reach
Of larger latent power.
Here and there a growing note
Swells from a conscious throat;
Thrilled with a message fraught
The pregnant hour is near;
We wait our Lyric Seer,
By whom our wills are caught.
1 88 Charles Bertram Johnson
Who makes our cause and wrong
The motif of his song;
Who sings our racial good,
Bestows us honor's place,
The cosmic brotherhood
Of genius — not of race.
Blind Homer, Greek or Jew,
Of fame's immortal few
Would still be deathless bom;
Frail Dunbar, black or white,
In Fame's eternal light,
Would shine a Star of Morn.
An unhorizoned range,
Our hour of doubt and change.
Gives song a nightless day.
Whose pen with pregnant mirth
Will give our longings birth,
And point our souls the way ?
Otto Leland Bohanan
THE DAWN'S AWAKE!
The Dawn's awake!
A flash of smoldering flame and fire
Ignites the East. Then, higher, higher,
O'er all the sky so gray, forlorn,
The torch of gold is borne.
The Dawn's awake!
The dawn of a thousand dreams and thrills.
And music singing in the hills
A paean of eternal spring
Voices the new awakening.
The Dawn's awake!
Whispers of pent-up harmonies,
With the mingled fragrance of the trees;
Faint snatches of half-forgotten song —
Fathers! torn and numb, —
The boon of light we craved, awaited long,
Has come, has come!
i«9
190 Otto Leland Bohanan
THE WASHER-WOMAN
A great swart cheek and the gleam of tears,
The flutter of hopes and the shadow of fears,
And all day long the rub and scrub
With only a breath betwixt tub and tub.
Fool! Thou hast toiled for fifty years
And what hast thou now but thy dusty tears?
In silence she rubbed . . . But her face I had seen,
Where the light of her soul fell shining and clean.
Theodore Henry Shackelford
THE BIG BELL IN ZION
Come, children, hear the joyful sound,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
Go spread the glad news all around,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
Chorus
Oh, the big bell's tollin' up in Zion,
The big bell's toUin' up in Zion,
The big bell's tollin' up in Zion,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
IVe been abused and tossed about,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
But glory to the Lamb, I shout!
Ding, Dong, Ding.
My bruthah jus' sent word to me,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
That he'd done set his own self free.
Ding, Dong, Ding.
Ole massa said he could not go.
Ding, Dong, Ding.
But he's done reached Ohio sho'.
Ding, Dong, Ding.
191
192 Theodore Henry Shackelford
Ise gwine to be real nice an' meek,
Ding, Dong, Ding.
Den I'll run away myself nex* week.
Ding, Dong, Ding.
Chorus
Oh, the big bell's tollin' up in Zion,
The big bell's tollin' up in Zion,
The big bell's tollin' up in Zion,
Ding, Dong Ding.
Lucian B. Watkins
STAR OF ETHIOPIA
Out in the Night thou art the sun
Toward which thy soul-charmed children run,
The faith-high height whereon they see
The glory of their Day To Be —
The peace at last when all is done.
The night is dark but, one by one,
Thy signals, ever and anon,
Smile beacon answers to their plea,
Out in the Night.
Ah, Life ! thy storms these cannot shun ;
Give them a hope to rest upon,
A dream to dream eternally,
The strength of men who would be free
And win the battle race begun,
Out in the Night!
X93
194 Lucian B. Watkins
TWO POINTS OF VIEW
From this low-lying valley; Oh, how sweet
And cool and calm and great is life, I ween,
There on yon mountain-throne — that sun-gold crest!
From this uplifted, mighty mountain-seat :
How bright and still and warm and soft and green
Seems yon low lily-vale of peace and rest !
Lucian B. Watkins 195
TO OUR FRIENDS
We've kept the faith. Our souls' high dreams
Untouched by bondage and its rod,
Burn on ! and on ! and on ! It seems
We shall have Friends — while God is God !
Benjamin Brawley
MY HERO
(To Robert Gould Shaw)
Flushed with the hope of high desire,
He buckled on his sword,
To dare the rampart ranged with fire.
Or where the thunder roared ;
Into the smoke and flame he went,
For God's great cause to die —
A youth of heaven's element.
The flower of chivalry.
This was the gallant faith, I trow,
Of which the sages tell;
On such devotion long ago
The benediction fell;
And never nobler martyr burned.
Or braver hero died.
Than he who worldly honor spurned
To serve the Crucified.
And Lancelot and Sir Bedivere
May pass beyond the pale.
And wander over moor and mere
To find the Holy Grail ;
197
198 Benjamin Brawley
But ever yet the prize forsooth
My hero holds in fee;
And he is Blameless Knight in truth,
And Galahad to me.
Benjamin Brawley 199
CHAUCER
Gone are the sensuous stars, and manifold,
Clear sunbeams burst upon the front of night ;
Ten thousand swords of azure and of gold
Give darkness to the dark and welcome light ;
Across the night of ages strike the gleams,
And leading on the gilded host appears
An old man writing in a book of dreams.
And telling tales of lovers for the years ;
Still Troilus hears a voice that whispers, Stay;
In Nature's garden what a mad rout sings!
Let's hear these motley pilgrims wile away
The tedious hours with stories of old things;
Or might some shining eagle claim
These lowly numbers for the House of Fame!
Joshua Henry Jones, Jr.
TO A SKULL
Ghastly, ghoulish, grinning skull,
Toothless, eyeless, hollow, dull.
Why your smirk and empty smile
As the hours away you wile ?
Has the earth become such bore
That it pleases nevermore?
Whence your joy through sun and rain?
Is 't because of loss of pain?
Have you learned what men learn not
That earth's substance turns to rot?
After learning now you scan
Vain endeavors man by man?
Do you mind that you as they
Once was held by mystic sway ;
Dreamed and struggled, hoped and prayed,
Lolled and with the minutes played?
Sighed for honors ; battles planned ;
Sipped of cups that wisdom banned
But would please the weak frail flesh ;
Suffered, fell, 'rose, struggled fresh?
Now that you are but a skull
Glimpse you life as life is, full
Of beauties that we miss
Till time withers with his kiss?
20Z
202 Joshua Henry Jones, Jr.
Sinoe jron caanot try aeuo?
And you know dnt wr, like jtw,
¥nil too bte our iaflk^B rue?
Tdl m^ clmli^ sraMung sbiU
Wktt tep bioo&ig\ o'er joa mull?
TeQ me why yoa smirk and smile
£re I pns life's sunset sdle.
^pendix
Appendix
plAcido's sonnet to his mother
despida a mi madre
{En La Capilla)
Si la suerte fatal que me ha cabido,
Y el triste fin de mi sangrienta historia,
Al salir de esta vida transitoria
Deja tu corazon de muerte herido;
Baste de llanto: el animo afligido
Recobre su quietud ; moro en la gloria,
Y mi placida lira a tu memoria
Lanza en la tumba su postrer sonido.
Sonido dulce, melodioso y santo,
Glorioso, espiritual, puro y divino,
Inocente, espontaneo como el llanto
Que vertiera al nacer: ya el cuello incline!
Ya de la religion me cubre el manto !
Adios, mi madre! adios — El Peligrino.
ao5
2o6 Appendix
FAREWELL TO MY MOTHER
{In the Chapel)
The appointed lot has come upon me, mother,
The mournful ending of my years of strife,
This changing world I leave, and to another
In blood and terror goes my spirit's life.
But thou, grief-smitten, cease thy mortal weeping
And let thy soul her wonted peace regain ;
I fall for right, and thoughts of thee are sweeping
Across my lyre to wake its dying strains.
A strain of joy and gladness, free, unfailing
All glorious and holy, pure, divine.
And innocent, unconscious as the wailing
I uttered on my birth; and I resign
Even now, my life, even now descending slowly,
Faith's mantle folds me to my slumbers holy.
Mother, farewell! God keep thee — and forever!
Translated by William Cullen Bryant,
Appendix 207
PLACIDO'S FAREWELL TO HIS MOTHER
( Written in the Chapel of the Hospital de Santa Cristina
on the Night Before His Execution)
If the unfortunate fate engulfing me,
The ending of my history of grief,
The closing of my span of years so brief,
Mother, should wake a single pang in thee,
Weep not. No saddening thought to me devote;
I calmly go to a death that is glory-filled.
My lyre before it is forever stilled
Breathes out to thee its last and dying note.
A note scarce more than a burden-easing sigh,
Tender and sacred, innocent, sincere —
Spontaneous and instinctive as the cry
I gave at birth — ^And now the hour is here —
O God, thy mantle of mercy o'er my sins!
Mother, farewell! The pilgrimage begins.
Translated by James Weldon Johnson.
Biographical Index of Authors
BoHANAN, Otto Leland. Born in Washington, D. C. Edu-
cated in the public schools in Washington. He is a grad-
uate of Howard University, School of Liberal Arts, Wash-
ington, D. C, and did special work in English at the
Catholic University in that city. At present he is engaged
in the musical profession in New York.
Braithwaite, William Stanley. Born in Boston, 1878.
Mainly self-educated. A critic of poetry and the friend of
poets. Author of Lyrics of Life, The House of Falling
Leaves, The Poetic Year, The Story of the Great War,
etc. Editor and compiler of The Book of Elizabethan
Verse, The Book of Georgian Verse, The Book of Restora-
tion Verse and a series of yearly anthologies of magazine
verse. One of the literary editors of the Boston Transcript.
Brawley, Benjamin. Born at Columbia, S. C, 1882. Edu-
cated at the Atlanta Baptist College, the University of
Chicago and Harvard University. For two years he was
professor of English at Howard University, Washington,
D. C. Later he became dean of Morehouse College, At-
lanta, Ga. Author of A Short History of the American
Negro, The Negro in Literature and Art, A Short History
of the English Drama, A Social History of the American
Negro, etc. Now living in Boston and engaged in re-
search and writing.
Campbell, James Edwin. Was born at Pomeroy, Ohio, in the
early sixties. His early life was somewhat shrouded in
mystery; he never referred to it even to his closest asso-
ciates. He was educated in the public schools of his native
city. Later he spent a while at Miami College. In the
late eighties and early nineties he was engaged in news-
paper work in Chicago. He wrote regularly on the various
dailies of that city. He was also one of a group that
issued the Four O'Clock Magazine, a literary publication
which flourished for several years. He died, perhaps,
twenty years ago. He was the author of Echoes from Th»
Cabin and Elsewhere, a volume of poems.
209
2IO Biographical Index of Authors
Carmichael, Waverley Turner. A young man who had
never been out of his native state of Alabama until several
years ago when he entered one of the summer courses at
Harvard University. His education to that time had been
very limited and he had endured poverty and hard work.
His verses came to the attention of one of the Harvard
professors. He has since published a volume, From the
Heart of a Folk. He served with the 367th Regiment,
"The Buffaloes," during the World War and saw active
service in France. At present he is employed as a postal
clerk in Boston, Mass.
Corrothers, James D., 1869-1919. Born in Cass County,
Michigan. Student in Northwestern University, minister
and poet. Many of his poems appeared in The Century
Magazine.
Cotter, Joseph S., Jr., 1895-1919. Born at Louisville, Kentucky,
in the room in which Paul Laurence Dunbar first read his
dialect poems in the South. He was precocious as a child,
having read a number of books before he was six years
old. All through his boyhood he had the advantage and
inspiration of the full library of poetic books belonging to
his father, himself a poet of considerable talent. Young
Cotter attended Fisk University but left in his second year
because he had developed tuberculosis. A volume of verse,
The Band of Gideon, and a number of unpublished poems
were written during the six years in which he was an
invalid.
in the granmiar and high, school of his native city. In
1912, as the result of illness, he lost the use of both legs
and his right arm. He does most of his writing lying flat
in bed and using his left hand. He is the author of The
Poet and Other Poems.
Davis, Daniel Webster. Born in Virginia, near Richmond.
For a number of years he was a minister and principal
of the largest public school in Richmond. He died in that
city some years ago. He was the author of *Weh Down
Souf, a volume of verse. He was very popular as an
orator and a reader of his own poems.
Dett, R. Nathaniel. Born at Drummondville, Canada, 1882.
Graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. He is a
composer, most of his compositions being based on themes
from the old "slave songs." His "Listen to de Lambs" is
widely used by choral societies. He is director of music
Biographical Index of Authors 21 1
at Hampton Institute. He is also the author of The Album
of a Heart, a volume of verse.
Du Bois, W. E. BURGHARDT. Born at Great Barrington, Mass.,
1868. Educated at Fisk University, Harvard University
and the University of Berlin. For a number of years pro-
fessor of economics and history at Atlanta University.
Author of the Suppression of the Slave Trade, The Phila-
delphia Negro, The Souls of Black Folk, John Brown,
Darkiuater, etc. He is the editor of The Crisis.
Dunbar, Paul Laurence. Born at Dayton, Ohio, 1872; died
1906. Dunbar was educated in the public schools. He
wrote his early poems while working as an elevator boy.
His first volume of poems, Oak and I<vy, was published in
1893 and sold largely through his own efforts. This was
followed by Majors and Minors, Lyrics of Lowly Life,
Lyrics of the Hearthside, Lyrics of Love and Laughter,
Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow and Howdy, Honey,
Howdy. Lyrics of Lowly Life, published in New York in
1896 with an introduction written by William Dean
Howells, gained national recognition for Dunbar. In addi-
tion to poetical works, Dunbar was the author of four
novels, The Uncalled, The Love of Landry, The Sport of
the Gods, and The Fanatics. He also published several
volumes of short stories. Partly because of his magnificent
voice and refined manners, he was a very successful reader
of his own poems and was able to add greatly to their
popularity.
Fauset, j£SSiE Redmon. Born at Snow Hill, New Jersey. She
was educated in the public schools of Philadelphia, at
Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania.
For a while she was teacher of French in the Dunbar High
School, Washington, D. C. Author of a number of un-
collected poems and several short stories. She is literary
editor of The Crisis,
Hill, Leslie Pinckney. Born at Lynchburg, Va., i88o. He was
educated in the public schools at Lynchburg and at Har-
vard University. On graduation he became a teacher of
English and methods at Tuskegee. Author of the Wings
of Oppression, a volume of verse. He is principal of the
Cheyney Training School for Teachers at Cheyney, Pa.
Holloway, John Wesley. Born in Merriweather County, Ga.,
1865. His father, who learned to read and write in
212 Biographical Index of Authors
slavery, became one of the first colored teachers in Georgia
after the Civil War. Mr. Holloway was educated at
Clark University, Atlanta, Ga., and at Fisk University,
Nashville, Tenn. He was for a while a member of the
Fisk Jubilee Singers. Has been a teacher and is now a
preacher. He is the author of From the Desert, a volume
of verse.
Jamison, Roscoe C. Born at Winchester, Tenn., 1888; died
1918. He was a graduate of Fisk University.
Johnson, Charles Bertram. Born at Callao, Mo., 1880. He
was educated in the public schools of his home town and
at Western College, Lincoln Institute and at Chicago Uni-
versity. He was a teacher for a number of years and is
now a pastor of a church at Moberly, Mo. He is the
author of Songs of My People.
Johnson, Fenton. Born at Chicago, 1888. He was educated
in the public schools and at the University of Chicago and
Northwestern University. The author of A Little Dream-
ing, Songs of the Soil and Visions of the Dusk. He has
devoted much time to journalism and the editing of a
magazine.
Johnson, Georgia Douglas. Born in Atlanta, Ga., 1886. She
was educated in the public schools of that city and at
Atlanta University. She is the author of a volume of
verse. The Heart of a Woman and other poems.
Johnson, James Weldon. Born at Jacksonville, Fla., 1871.
He was educated in the public schools of Jacksonville, at
Atlanta University and at Columbia University. He
taught school in his native town for several years. Later
he came to New York with his brother, J. Rosamond John-
son, and began writing for the musical comedy stage. He
served seven years as U. S. Consul in Venezuela and
Nicaragua. Author of The Autobiography of an Ex-
colored Man, Fifty Years and Other Poems, and the Eng-
lish libretto to Goyescas, the Spanish grand opera, pro-
duced at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1915.
Jones, Edward Smyth. Attracted national attention about ten
years ago by walking some hunderds of miles from his
home in the South to Harvard University. Arriving
there, he was arrested on a charge of vagrancy. While
in jail, he wrote a poem, "Harvard Square." The poem
created a sentiment that led to his quick release. He is
the author of The Sylvan Cabin,
Biographical Index of Authors 213
Jones, Joshua Henry, Jr. He is engaged in newspaper worlc
in Boston and is the author of a volume of poems, The
Heart of the World.
Margetson, George Reginald. Was born at St. Kitts, British
West Indies, in 1877. He was educated at the Moravian
school in his district. He came to the United States in
1897. Mr. Margetson has found it necessary to work hard
to support a large family and his poems have been written
in his spare moments. He is the author of two volumes of
verses, Songs of Life and The Fledgling Bard and the
Poetry Society and, in addition, a large number of un-
collected poems. Mr. Margetson lives in Boston.
McClellan, George Marion. Born at Belfast, Tenn., i860.
Graduate of Fisk University and Hartford Theological
Seminary, teacher, principal and author. He is the author
of The Path of Dreams.
McKay, Claude. Born in Jamaica, West Indies, 1889. Such
education as he gained in boyhood he received from his
brother. He served for a while as a member of the
Kingston Constabulary. In 1912 he came to the United
States. For two years he was a student of agriculture at
the Kansas State College. Since leaving school Mr. McKay
has turned his hand to any kind of work to earn a living.
He has worked in hotels and on the Pullman cars. He
is to-day associate editor of The Liberator, He is the author
of two volumes of poems. Songs of Jamaica and Spring in
Ne<vj Hampshire, the former published in Jamaica and the
latter in London.
Moore, William H. A. Was born in New York City and re-
ceived his education in the public schools and at the City
College. He also did some special work at Columbia
University. He has had a long career as a newspaper
man, working on both white and colored publications.
He now lives in Chicago. He is the author of Dusk Songs,
a volume of poems.
Nelson, Alice Moore (Dunbar). Born at New Orleans, La.,
1875. She was educated in the schools of New Orleans
and has taken special courses at Cornell University, Co-
lumbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania.
Author of Violets and Other Tales, The Goodness of St.
Rocque, Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence, and The Dunbar
Speaker. She was married to Paul Laurence Dunbar in
1898. She has been a teacher and is well known on the
lecture platform and as an editor.
214 Biographical Index of Authors
Rogers, Alex. Born at Nashville, Tenn., 1876. Educated in
the public schools of that city. For many years a writer
of words for popular songs. He wrote many of the songs
for the musical comedies in which Williams and Walker
appeared. He is the author of The Jonah Man, Nobody
and other songs made popular by Mr. Bert Williams.
Shackelford, Theodore Henry. Author of Mammy's Cracklin*
Bread and Other Poems, and My Country and Other Poems.
Spencer, Anne. Born in Bramwell, W. Va,, 1882. Educated
at the Virginia Seminary, Lynchburg, Va. She lives at
Lynchburg and takes great pride and pleasure in her
garden.
Watkins, Luctan B., was born in Virginia. He served overseas
in the great war and lost his health. He died in 1921.
He was the author of a large number of uncollected poems.
INDEX OF TITLES
yAGE
Aft€r the Winter 138
And What Shall You Say? 152
At the Carnival 169
At the Closed Gate of Justice 27
Band of Gideon, The 154
Banjo Player, The 122
Barrier, The 141
Before the Feast of Shushan 167
Big Bell in Zion, The 191
Black Mammies 98
Brothers 85
Butterfly in Church, A 56
Calling the Doctor 94
Chaucer 199
Children of the Sun . . . 117
Christmas at Melrose 102
Christmas Eve in France 162
Compensation 25
Corn Song, The 96
Creation, The . . .' 76
Cunjah Man, De 18
Dawn's Awake! The 189
Dead Fires 164
Death Song, A .16
Debt, The 10
Del Cascar 63
Dogwood Blossoms 5^5
Dream and the Song 36
Drum Majah, De 114
Dunbar 174
Dusk Song 43
Feet of Judas, The 58
Fifty Years 89
Flame-Heart 143
Harlem Dancer, The 136
Harlem Shadows 137
2x5
216 Index of Titles
PACK
Haunted Oak, The u
Heart of a Woman, The 127
Hills of Sewanee, The 57
Hog Meat 41
If We Must Die 134
Indignation Dinner, An 34
In the Matter of Two Men 32
Ironic: LL.D. 65
Is It Because I Am Black? 153
'Ittle Touzle Head no
It Was Not Fate 46
I Want to Die While You Love Me .... .130
Keep Me, Jesus, Keep Me 181
La Vie C'est la Vie 161
Litany of Atlanta, A 49
Little Brown Baby 5
Little Cabin, A 185
Lost Illusions 129
Lover's Lane 8
Lynching, The 133
Miss Melerlee 93
Mother Night 83
My Hero 197
My Little Dreams 132
Negro Love Song» A 3
Negro Poets 187
Negro Serenade 17
Negro Singer, The 29
Negro Soldiers, The 159
New Day, The 119
O Black and Unknown Bards 73
Oblivion 166
or Doc' Hyar 21
Oriflamme 165
O Southland 84
Paul Laurence Dunbar 28
Prayer, A 151
Rain Music 156
Rain Song, The 177
Rhapsody . . 68
Index of Titles 217
PAGE
Road to the Bow, The 30
Rubinstein Staccato Etude, The ...... izs
Sandy Star and Willie Gee ....... 59
Scarlet Woman, The 123
Scintilla 66
Sence You Went Away . 75
Ships That Pass in the Night 7
Sic Vita 67
Song of Thanks, A 107
Sonnet 183
Sprin' Fevah 113
Spring in New Hampshire 139
Stanzas from The Fledgling Bard and the Poetry Society . 69
Star of Ethiopia . 193
Summer Magic 104
Supplication 157
Teacher, The 105
Time to Die 109
Tired 121
Tired Worker, The 140
To a Skull 201
To O. E. A 142
To Our Friends 195
To the White Fiends 135
Translation 173
Turn Me to My Yellow Leaves 64
Tuskegee 101
Two-an'-Six 145
Two Points of View 194
Uncle Eph's Banjo Song 20
Washer-Woman, The 190
'Weh Down Souf 39
Welt 131
When de Co'n Pone's Hot 14
When Ol' Sis Judy Pray 23
White Witch, The 80
Why Adam Sinned 175
Wife-Woman, The 171
Winter Is Coming 182
Youth . 12S
Zalka Peetruza ii2
PS ^51
DARKWATER
By W. E. B. DuBois
A human document of ex-
traordinary intensity and in-
sight, describing the awakened
conscience and aspirations of
the darker races everywhere
and how it feels to be a black
man in a white world. Even
more than the late Booker
Washington, Dr. DuBois is
now the chief spokesman of
the two hundred million men
and women of African blood.
"Dr. DuBois is an artist,
and his book m.ust be reckoned
among those that add not only
to the wisdom, but to the ex-
altation and the glory of
man." — Francis Hackett in
The New Republic.
HARCOURT, BRACE & CO.
r
Vnusual Collections j)f M^odern Writing
MODERN ESSAYS: FIRST SERIES
MODERN ESSAYS: SECOND SERIES, Selected by Christophbr
MORLBY.
Christopher Morley's first collection of Modern Essays has already sold over
40,000. This second series includes tome thirty writers, among whom are
Stephen Graham, C. E. Montague, Alice Meynell, H. S. Canby, H. W. Nevia-
son, Stephen Leacock, Willa Gather, Maurice Hewlett, Sherwood Anderson.
With biographical and critical notes. Each, cloth, $2.00 ; three-quarters leather,
each. $5.00.
MODERN BRITISH POETRY (Revised and Enlarged). Cloth,
$2.50; leather, $3.50.
MODERN AMERICAN POETRY (Revised and Enlarged). Cloth,
$3.00; leather, $4.00. Collected by Louis Untermbyer.
The most comprehensive collections of modern verse available. They cover
the writers from 1850 through to-day and they show by their chronological
arrangement, together with the critical introductory essay ajid the biographical
notes, the steady development of modern poetry. The set boxed, leather, $7.50.
THIS SINGING WORLD. Selected and edited by Louis Untj»-
MEYSR.
An anthology of modern poetry for young people, containing 350 poems by
148 poets. Illustrated by Florence W. Ivins. $3.00.
THE BEST POEMS OF 1924. Edited by Thomas Moult.
An annual series, in which Mr. Moult brings together the best poetry pub-
lished within the year in both American and British periodicals. $2.00.
BEST SERMONS. Edited by Joseph Fort Newton.
An annual series, containing sermons selected by Dr. Newton from all
American creeds and denominations representing the best religious thought ol
the day. Best Sermons: 1924. Best Sermons: 1925. Each, $2.50.
ONE-ACT PLAYS BY MODERN AUTHORS. Edited by Hblbn
Louise Cohen.
The complete text of sixteen modern one-act plays, with an introduction en
the theatre. $225.
LONGER PLAYS BY MODERN AUTHORS. Edited by Hblin
Louise Cohen.
Beau Brummell, by Clyde Fitch — The Copperhead, by Augustus Thomai
— Dulcv, by Kaufman and Connelly — The Intimate Strangers, by Booth
Tarkington. Historical introduction on American drama, critical notes pre-
ceding each play and selected bibliography on the study of American drama.
$2.00.
AMERICANS ALL. CoUcctcd by B. J. Heydrick.
Fourteen short stories chosen for their excellence as interpretations ol our
Tiany-sided American life. $1.50.
ONTEMPORARY AMERICAN LITERATURE
IDERN BRITISH LITERATURE. By John M. Manly and
Edith Rickbrt.
Outlines for study, bibliographies, biographies, studies, and reviews eover-
iag no/elists, poets, dramatists, essayists, etc Each, $1.50.
HARCOURT,. BRACE & COMPANY, '^ "N'.r?.'Jk"°"*